B- and T-cell memory

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B- and T-cell memory

B10

B10

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Transcript

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B- and T-cell memory Your immune system is like the military - with two main branches, the innate immune response and the adaptive immune response. Key features of the innate immune response are that the cells are non-specific, meaning that they don’t distinguish one invader from another invader; the response is really fast - occurring within minutes to hours; and there’s no memory associated with innate responses. The adaptive response, which is mediated by lymphocytes like B and T cells - is the opposite of the innate immune response. B and T cells have unique receptors - the B cell receptor and T cell receptor - that differentiate pathogens from each other using their unique parts - called antigens.

These receptors are developed while the T cell or B cell is developing in the bone marrow for B cells or thymus for T cells. Once the cell has a unique antigen-specific receptor expressed on its surface it begins traveling through the lymphatic system - passing through lymph nodes in search for the one antigen that fits the receptor perfectly. If they encounter that antigen, a signal gets delivered to the cell’s nucleus that leads to clonal expansion. That’s where a single T cell or B cell replicates over and over - creating an army of clones that can combat the pathogen. Once the immune response is complete, many of these cells die by apoptosis restoring the immune response to its original size - with one major change. Some of the B and T cells become memory cells, which are basically a pool of lymphocytes that are all set to combat the pathogen, if they encounter it again!

Immunologic memory is sometimes referred to as a secondary or anamnestic response, and it’s different from the primary response. During the primary response a small number of naive B and T cells require activation before they can respond to the pathogen. And activating those B and T cells requires a relatively high pathogen burden and can take days to weeks. And the innate response is really important to fill the gap while the adaptive response is being mounted.

In the secondary response, the memory B and T cells, as well as antibodies, are already made, and it takes a relatively low pathogen burden to re-engage the adaptive immune response. As a result, the innate and adaptive immune response end up working with each other right away to eliminate the pathogen.

In the primary immune response, naive B cells residing in the lymphoid follicles of the secondary lymphoid organs get activated through their interactions with other immune cells. First, macrophages trap antigens entering the lymphoid organs and take them to the follicles Here, the B cell acts as an antigen presenting cell - processing and serving up protein antigens to T follicular helper cells. In response, the T follicular helper cell expresses CD40L on its surface and produces IL-21, and together they induce the B cell to undergo class switching and affinity maturation. In class switching, the B cell shifts from expressing a B cell receptor with IgM and IgD to expressing IgG, IgE, or IgA. In affinity maturation, only the B-cells with a higher affinity to the specific antigen thrive as they can bind to even low levels of the antigen and still be stimulated to survive and differentiate.

Key Takeaways

B and T cells are the two main types of lymphocytes or white blood cells that play a role in the immune response. Both B and T cells can remember previous encounters with foreign antigens, which helps them to quickly and effectively respond to future infections by the same microorganisms.

B cells produce antibodies, which bind to pathogens and mark them for destruction by other immune cells. T cells kill infected host cells or help B cells produce more antibodies. Memory B and T cells persist in the body for many years, providing lifelong protection against reinfection by the same pathogen.