Transcriptional regulation of B cell class-switch recombination: the role in development of noninfectious complications

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Abstract

Introduction: The process of immunoglobulin class switch recombination (CSR) occurs in secondary lymphoid organs. This highly regulated process is essential for the development of different antibody isotype maturation and long-life memory/plasma cell generation. Patients with impaired CSR present heterogeneous noninfectious complications. Areas covered: We provide an overview of recent advancements in the tight regulation of B cells before and during the CSR at different levels of cytokine stimulations, intracellular signaling, transcription-factor activation, gene transcription, and epigenetic controls. Expert opinion: Besides recurrent infections which result from the lack of production of class-switched immunoglobulins, intrinsic B cell signaling pathways and regulatory component defects have distinct roles in other immune-related clinical manifestations including autoimmunity, atopy, lymphoproliferation, and cancer.

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Vlachiotis, S., & Abolhassani, H. (2022). Transcriptional regulation of B cell class-switch recombination: the role in development of noninfectious complications. Expert Review of Clinical Immunology. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/1744666X.2022.2123795

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