Plasticity Under Somatic Mutation in Antigen Receptors

Author(s):  
T. B. Kepler ◽  
S. Bartl
1998 ◽  
Vol 188 (4) ◽  
pp. 765-772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Meffre ◽  
Fotini Papavasiliou ◽  
Paul Cohen ◽  
Odette de Bouteiller ◽  
Diana Bell ◽  
...  

The germinal center (GC) is an anatomic compartment found in peripheral lymphoid organs, wherein B cells undergo clonal expansion, somatic mutation, switch recombination, and reactivate immunoglobulin gene V(D)J recombination. As a result of somatic mutation, some GC B cells develop higher affinity antibodies, whereas others suffer mutations that decrease affinity, and still others may become self-reactive. It has been proposed that secondary V(D)J rearrangements in GCs might rescue B cells whose receptors are damaged by somatic mutations. Here we present evidence that mature human tonsil B cells coexpress conventional light chains and recombination associated genes, and that they extinguish recombination activating gene and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase expression when their receptors are cross-linked. Thus, the response of the recombinase to receptor engagement in peripheral B cells is the opposite of the response in developing B cells to the same stimulus. These observations suggest that receptor revision is a mechanism for receptor diversification that is turned off when antigen receptors are cross-linked by the cognate antigen.


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