3 Clinical immunology
Questions
Please could you explain how lymphocytes (especially B) can maintain receptors on their surfaces? Is this genetically related? If so, when the lymphocytes are first exposed to the antigens, how could the antigen receptor be synthesized?
B cells differentiate from lymphoid cells in the bone marrow in a way that allows them to express an antigen receptor on the surface permanently. The expression of the receptor is a definition of B cells and is a result of the differentiation pathway. The antigen receptor varies from one immature B cell to another. There are billions of different receptors, but any B cell will express only one type of receptor. The antigen does not ‘design’ the receptor; rather, a clonal B cell that recognizes the antigen (very few B cells will recognize a given antigen) will proliferate in response to the antigen and signals from T cells.
The following are the major patterns of deficiency:
(See K&C 7e, p. 71 for a discussion of complement deficiency.)
‘Oligoclonal’ antibodies are produced by more than one clone (family) of cells, but not by as many as are involved in the production of polyclonal antibodies. ‘Monoclonal’ indicates that the antibodies are produced by a single clone of cells.