| Literature DB >> 22566959 |
Abstract
Activated B cells proliferate and differentiate into antibody-producing cells, long-lived plasma cells, and memory B cells after immunization or infection. Repeated encounter of the same antigen triggers the rapid re-activation of pre-existing specific memory B cells, which then potentially enter new germinal center reactions and differentiate into short-lived plasmablasts or remain in the system as memory B cells. Short-lived class-switched IgG and IgA plasmablasts appear in the circulation transiently and the frequency of these cells can be remarkably high. The specificities and affinities of single plasmablasts in humans have been reported for several viral infections, so far most extensively for influenza and HIV. In general, the immunoglobulin variable regions of plasmablasts are highly mutated and diverse, suggesting that plasmablasts are derived from memory B cells, yet it is unclear which memory B cell subsets are activated and whether activated memory B cells adapt or mature before differentiation. This review summarizes what is known about the phenotype and the origin of human plasmablasts in the context of viral infections and whether these cells can be predictors of long-lived immunity.Entities:
Keywords: antibodies; dengue; memory B cells; plasmablast; virus
Year: 2012 PMID: 22566959 PMCID: PMC3341968 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2012.00078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Markers of infection-induced plasmablasts and plasma cells in human blood.
| Marker | Function | Memory B cells | Plasmablasts | Plasma cells | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD19 | Transmembrane signaling molecule; part of BCR complex; regulating BCR signal | + | Low | Low | Engel et al. ( |
| CD20 | Transmembrane signaling molecule; part of the BCR complex | + | − | − | Arpin et al. ( |
| CD27 | TNF receptor family | + | ++ | +++ | Borst et al. ( |
| CD38 | Signaling molecule and enzyme that catalyzes the formation of cyclic ADP–ribose | +/− | ++ | +++ | Partida-Sanchez et al. ( |
| CD138 | Heparan sulfate proteoglycan; syndecan-1 | − | +/− | + | Qian et al. ( |
| Ki-67 | Protein expressed intracellularly during cell division | − | + | +/− | Wrammert et al. ( |
Figure 1Origin of plasmablasts in steady state and during 1. During steady state, i.e., in healthy individuals the majority of plasmablasts in the circulation is IgA+ and is derived from mucosal immune responses (Mei et al., 2009). During systemic infection more IgG+ cells from non-mucosal secondary lymphoid organs participate in the response. During repeated (2ry) systemic infection with the same antigen a majority of the acute-phase plasmablasts are IgG+ and derive from memory B cells, which have undergone class-switch and affinity maturation in germinal centers.