The development of an adaptive immune system based on the random generation of antigen receptors requires a stringent selection process that sifts through receptor specificities to remove those reacting with self-antigens. In the B-cell lineage, this selection process is first applied to IgM+ immature B cells. By using increasingly sophisticated mouse models, investigators have identified the central tolerance mechanisms that negatively select autoreactive immature B cells and prevent inclusion of their antigen receptors into the peripheral B-cell pool. Additional studies have uncovered mechanisms that promote the differentiation of nonautoreactive immature B cells and their positive selection into the peripheral B-cell population. These mechanisms of central selection are fundamental to the generation of a naïve B-cell repertoire that is largely devoid of self-reactivity while capable of reacting with any foreign insult. © 2012 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Pelanda, R., & Torres, R. M. (2012). Central B-Cell tolerance: Where selection begins. Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.1101/cshperspect.a007146
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