B Cell Response
Antibodies serve various functions in protecting the host against the pathogen. Their soluble forms which carry out these functions are produced by plasma B cells, a type of white blood cell. This production is tightly regulated and requires the activation of B cells by activated T cells (another type of white blood cell), which is a sequential procedure. The major steps involved are:
- Specific or nonspecific recognition of the pathogen (because of its antigens) with its subsequent engulfing by B cells or macrophages. This activates the B cell only partially.
- Antigen processing.
- Antigen presentation.
- Activation of the T helper cells by antigen-presenting cells.
- Costimulation of the B cell by activated T cell resulting in its complete activation.
- Proliferation of B cells with resultant production of soluble antibodies.
Read more about this topic: Polyclonal Response/Archive 1
Famous quotes containing the words cell and/or response:
“What Mrs. Thatcher did for women was to demonstrate that if a woman had enough desire she could do what she wanted, do anything a man could do.... Mrs. Thatcher did not have one traditional feminine cell in her body.”
—Julie Burchill (b. 1960)
“Women had to deal with the mens response when the women wanted more time out of the home; men now must deal with the womens response as men want more time in.”
—Kyle D. Pruett (20th century)