| Literature DB >> 7518415 |
R R Hardy1, C E Carmack, Y S Li, K Hayakawa.
Abstract
CD5+ B cells constitute a small fraction of cells in the spleen of adult mice that exhibit numerous features serving to distinguish them from the bulk of IgD++CD5- "conventional" B cells. In this review we focus on two major questions relating to this population: 1) the relationship of CD5+ B cells to other B cells; and 2) the distinctive enrichment of particular autoreactive specificities in this subset. The nature of their origins is clarified by a thorough analysis of intermediate stages of early B-cell development in both fetal and adult tissues. The reactivity to bromelain-treated mouse red blood cells serves as a prototype system for the investigation of biased specificities in CD5+ B cells. These lines of investigation lead us to propose that CD5+ B cells in the adult are the remnant of a distinct fetal B-cell differentiation pathway wherein selection of cells from this fetal/neonatal population into the adult long-lived pool results in the over-expression of certain germline-encoded autoreactivities.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7518415 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-065x.1994.tb00660.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunol Rev ISSN: 0105-2896 Impact factor: 12.988