Multiple routes to B-cell memory

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Abstract

B-cell memory describes the populations of cells that provide long-term humoral immunity: long-lived antibody-secreting plasma cells that reside mainly in the bone marrow and memory B cells. Interestingly, the memory B-cell population is heterogenous, although the importance of this heterogeneity has been unclear. Recent studies have investigated the formation and function of memory in different settings. In particular, T-independent memory-like cells and T-dependent (TD) IgM memory B cells qualitatively differ from canonical TD class-switched memory B cells; however, these studies suggest that IgM memory cells preserve the memory population over long periods of time. These subsets are evocative of the evolution of the humoral immune response, with memory-like cells appearing before acquisition of germinal centers, suggesting that there are multiple pathways to producing B-cell memory. © The Japanese Society for Immunology. 2012. All rights reserved.

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Good-Jacobson, K. L., & Tarlinton, D. M. (2012, July). Multiple routes to B-cell memory. International Immunology. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxs050

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