- The differentiation of B cells into antibody producing cells is called B cell Maturation.
- During maturation process, the immature B cells develop into mature B Cells.
- By maturation, the B cells gain the ability to produce antibodies. B cell maturation is an antigen dependent process.
- B cell maturation occurs in the secondary lymphoid organs such as spleen, lymph nodes and Peyer’s patches.
- For maturation, the immature B cells of bone marrow leave the bone marrow, migrate through the blood and lymph and reach the secondary lymphoid organs like spleen, lymph nodes and Peyer’s patches. These migrating B cells are called transitional B cells.
- In the lymphoid organs, virgin B cells are exposed to antigens for the first time.
- B cells that encounter antigen for the first time are called naive B cells.
- The B cells recognize the antigens.
- Through antigen recognition, B cells are activated.
- B cells exist as clones. There are about 109 clones of B cells in a body system.
- Each clone is specified for a particular antigen.
- A single B cell clone recognizes a particular antigen. Most of the B cells of that clone differentiate into plasma cells. The plasma cells secrete antibodies
- A few activated B cells of that clone become memory B cells.
- They recognize the same antigen which encounters in future.
- The activated B cells go through affinity maturation and class switching.
- With each encounter, the number of memory cells increases. It is accompanied by affinity maturation which induces the survival of B cells with great affinity for that antigen.
- Naive B cells have IgM and IgD on their surface.
- They have same binding VDJ regions but different constant regions.
- They leave bone marrow with single specificity.
- The naive B cells have very short life. They live only for 3 days to 8 weeks.
- The activated B cells express receptors for IL-2, IL-4, IL-5 and others. These bind to cytokines released by TH cells.
- The pro-B cells develop a B cell marker called B 220 on their surface.
- The pre-B cells develop a surrogate light chain on their surface.
- The immature B cells express on their surface IgM.
- The mature B cells express on their surface both IgM and IgD.
- The early stage mature cells, express low levels of IgD. When these cells reach lymph nodes, the level of IgD increases.
- The activated B cells have IgM, IgD and IgA or IgE.
- The plasma cells have on their surface IgG, IgA, IgE or IgM.
Mechanism of B Cell Maturation
- During maturation the immature B cells are subjected to three important Processes. They are:
- Clonal selection
- Affinity maturation
- Class switching,
Clonal Selection
- The selection of a single lymphocyte (B or T) out of the thousands of lymphocytes by an antigen and its proliferation into a population of similar cells to fight against that antigen is called clonal selection.
- The clonal selection hypothesis was proposed by FM. Burnet, the Nobel Prize winner for his theory.
Mechanism of Clonal Selection
- Thousands of lymphocytes circulate in the blood and lymph.
- Each lymphocyte has a single type of receptor with a unique specificity.
- When an antigen binds to the receptor, the lymphocyte is activated.
- The activated cell undergoes proliferation, producing a population of similar cells, a clone.
- This clone of cells bears identical receptors similar to the parental cell.
- The clone of cells join together and launch a war on the antigen (infection).
- When a B cell is selected, it proliferates into many plasma cells and a few memory B cells.
- The plasma cells and memory B cells have the same type of receptors as their parental cells.
- The plasma cells produce enormous amount of antibodies.
- The memory cells respond in future when there is similar type of infection.
Affinity Maturation
- Affinity maturation is the process of producing antibodies by B cells with increased affinity for antigen.
- With repeated exposures to the same antigen, the host will produce antibodies of greater affinities.
Class Switching
- Class switching is an immunological process by which the antibody produc tion of B cells changes from one class to another class. For example, the change from the production of IgM to IgG.
- It is also called
- Immunoglobulin class switching
- Isotype switching
- Isotypic commutation
- Class switch recombination.
Mechanism of Class Switching
- Class switching starts when the B cell is activated by an antigen.
- This mechanism allows the B cell to produce the required classes of antibodies such as IgA, IgE or IgG.
- Each type of antigen is adapted for a distinct function.
- The function of the antibody is determined by the constant (c) regions of the immunoglobulin.
- Class switching allows different daughter cells from the same activated B cell to produce antibodies of different types.
- The constant region (c) of the antibody heavy chain alone changes during class switching.
- The variable regions remain unchanged during class switching.
- Therefore the antigen specificity also remains unchanged during class switching.
- Thus the progeny of a single B cell can produce antibodies all specific for the same antigen but with ability to fight each antigenic challenge.
- Class switching is triggered by cytokines. Hence the type of antibody generated depends on the cytokines present in the B cell environment.
- Class switching occurs in the heavy chain gene locus by a mechanism called class switch recombination (CSR).
- The CSR mechanism relies on the conserved nucleotide motifs called switch (S) regions found in the DNA upstream of each constant region gene.
- The DNA strand is broken by the activity of a series of enzymes at two selected S regions.
- The variable domain exon is rejoined through a process called non homologous end joining (NHEJ) to the desired constant region.
- This process results in an immunoglobulin gene that encodes antibody of a different type.