自身免疫
生物
免疫学
表型
免疫系统
获得性免疫系统
CD11c公司
效应器
促炎细胞因子
先天免疫系统
炎症
遗传学
基因
作者
Swati Phalke,Juan Rivera‐Correa,Daniel E. Jenkins,Danny Flores Castro,Evgenia Giannopoulou,Alessandra B. Pernis
摘要
Abstract Age‐associated B cells (ABCs) have emerged as critical components of immune responses. Their inappropriate expansion and differentiation have increasingly been linked to the pathogenesis of autoimmune disorders, aging‐associated diseases, and infections. ABCs exhibit a distinctive phenotype and, in addition to classical B cell markers, often express the transcription factor T‐bet and myeloid markers like CD11c; hence, these cells are also commonly known as CD11c + T‐bet + B cells. Formation of ABCs is promoted by distinctive combinations of innate and adaptive signals. In addition to producing antibodies, these cells display antigen‐presenting and proinflammatory capabilities. It is becoming increasingly appreciated that the ABC compartment exhibits a high degree of heterogeneity, plasticity, and sex‐specific regulation and that ABCs can differentiate into effector progeny via several routes particularly in autoimmune settings. In this review, we will discuss the initial insights that have been obtained on the molecular machinery that controls ABCs and we will highlight some of the unique aspects of this control system that may enable ABCs to fulfill their distinctive role in immune responses. Given the expanding array of autoimmune disorders and pathophysiological settings in which ABCs are being implicated, a deeper understanding of this machinery could have important and broad therapeutic implications for the successful, albeit daunting, task of targeting these cells.
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