Germinal center-dependent and -independent memory B cells produced throughout the immune response

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Abstract

Memory B cells comprise a heterogenous group of cells that differ in origin and phenotype. During the early phases of the immune response, activated B cells can differentiate into IgM-expressing memory cells, short-lived plasma cells, or seed germinal centers (GCs). The memory compartment is subsequently enriched by B cells that have been through several rounds of division and selection in the GC. Here, we report on the use of an unbiased lineage-tracking approach to explore the origins and properties of memory B cell subsets in mice with an intact immune system. We find that activated B cells continue to differentiate into memory B cells throughout the immune response. When defined on the basis of their origins, the memory B cells originating fromactivated B cells or GCs differ in isotype and overall gene expression, somatic hypermutation, and their affinity for antigen.

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Viant, C., Wirthmiller, T., ElTanbouly, M. A., Chen, S. T., Cipolla, M., Ramos, V., … Nussenzweig, M. C. (2021). Germinal center-dependent and -independent memory B cells produced throughout the immune response. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 218(8). https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20202489

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