The need for central and peripheral tolerance in the B cell repertoire

CC Goodnow, S Adelstein, A Basten - Science, 1990 - science.org
Science, 1990science.org
The immune system normally avoids producing antibodies that react with autologous (" self")
antigens by censoring self-reactive T and B cells. Unlike the T cell repertoire, antibody
diversity is generated within the B cell repertoire in two phases; the first occurs by gene
rearrangement in primary lymphoid organs, and the second phase involves antigen-driven
hypermutation in peripheral lymphoid organs. The possibility that distinct cellular
mechanisms may impose self tolerance at these two different phases of B cell diversification …
The immune system normally avoids producing antibodies that react with autologous ("self") antigens by censoring self-reactive T and B cells. Unlike the T cell repertoire, antibody diversity is generated within the B cell repertoire in two phases; the first occurs by gene rearrangement in primary lymphoid organs, and the second phase involves antigen-driven hypermutation in peripheral lymphoid organs. The possibility that distinct cellular mechanisms may impose self tolerance at these two different phases of B cell diversification may explain recent findings in transgenic mouse models, in which self-reactive B cells appear to be silenced both by functional inactivation and by physical elimination.
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