| Literature DB >> 10688906 |
M H Levine1, A M Haberman, D B Sant'Angelo, L G Hannum, M P Cancro, C A Janeway, M J Shlomchik.
Abstract
Seventy percent of peripheral immature conventional (B2) B cells fail to develop into mature B cells. The nature of this cell loss has not been characterized; the process that governs which immature B cells develop into long-lived peripheral B cells could be either stochastic or selective. Here, we demonstrate that this step is in fact selective, in that the fate of an immature B cell is highly dependent on its Ig receptor specificity. A significant skewing of the B cell receptor repertoire occurs by the time cells enter the mature B cell fraction, which indicates that there is selection of only a minority of immature B cells to become mature B cells. Because only a few heavy-light chain pairs are enhanced of the diverse available repertoire, we favor the idea that selection is positive for these few heavy-light chain pairs rather than negative against nearly all others. Because most immature B cells are lost at this transition, this putative positive selection event is likely to be a major force shaping the mature B cell receptor repertoire available for adaptive immune responses.Mesh:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10688906 PMCID: PMC16000 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.050552997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205