In the past two decades it has become clear that in addition to antigen presentation and antibody production B cells play prominent roles in immune regulation. While B cell-derived IL-10 has garnered much attention, B cells also effectively regulate inflammation by a variety of IL-10-independent mechanisms. B cell regulation has been studied in both autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. While collectively called regulatory B cells (Breg), no definitive phenotype has emerged for B cells with regulatory potential. This has made their study challenging and thus unique B cell regulatory mechanisms have emerged in a disease-dependent manner. Thus to harness the therapeutic potential of Breg, further studies are needed to understand how they emerge and are induced to evoke their regulatory activities.
CITATION STYLE
Ray, A., & Dittel, B. N. (2017, January 23). Mechanisms of regulatory b cell function in autoimmune and inflammatory diseases beyond IL-10. Journal of Clinical Medicine. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm6010012
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