Finding the right niche: B-cell migration in the early phases of T-dependent antibody responses

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Abstract

Humoral immune responses depend on B cells encountering antigen, interacting with helper T cells, proliferating and differentiating into low-affinity plasma cells or, after organizing intoa germinal center (GC), high-affinity plasma cells and memory B cells. Remarkably, each of theseevents occurs in association with distinct stromal cells in separate subcompartments of the lymphoid tissue. B cells must migrate from niche to niche in a rapid and highly regulated manner tosuccessfully mount a response. The chemokine, CXCL13, plays a central role in guiding B cells tofollicles whereas T-zone chemokines guide activated B cells to the T zone. Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) promotes cell egress from the tissue, as well as marginal-zone B-cell positioning in the spleen. Recent studies have identified a role for the orphan receptor, EBV-induced molecule 2 (EBI2;GPR183), in guiding activated B cells to inter and outer follicular niche(s) and down-regulation of this receptor is essential for organizing cells into GCs. In this review, we discuss current understanding of the roles played by chemokines, S1P and EBI2 in the migration events that underlie humoral immune responses. © The Japanese Society for Immunology. 2010.

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Pereira, J. P., Kelly, L. M., & jason, J. G. C. (2010). Finding the right niche: B-cell migration in the early phases of T-dependent antibody responses. International Immunology, 22(6), 413–419. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxq047

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