Role of germinal centers for the induction of broadly-reactive memory B cells.
Virus-specific memory B cells (Bmem) play a crucial role in protecting against variant viruses. The ability to recognize these variant viruses, defined as antibody breadth, is achieved in Bmem populations by two very different pathways, germline-encoded cross-reactivity and affinity-driven, somatic evolution in germinal centers (GCs) for conserved viral epitopes. The latter class of broadly-reactive Bmem cells are not cross-reactive per se, but bind epitopes crucial for viral fitness. Although these conserved epitopes are often weakly immunogenic, the GC reaction is surprisingly permissive for the continued survival/proliferation of B cells that bind with low affinity or react to cryptic epitopes, increasing their chance of memory recruitment. In this review, we discuss the adaptive strategies of B-cell memory to viral antigenic variations.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Viruses
- Immunology
- Immunologic Memory
- Humans
- Germinal Center
- Epitopes
- Cell Survival
- Cell Proliferation
- B-Lymphocytes
- Antigens, Viral
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Viruses
- Immunology
- Immunologic Memory
- Humans
- Germinal Center
- Epitopes
- Cell Survival
- Cell Proliferation
- B-Lymphocytes
- Antigens, Viral