B-Cell Development and Antibody Production
B lymphocytes develop in the bone marrow, where they rearrange their immunoglobulin genes to assemble a B-cell receptor and are screened against self-antigen before entering the periphery. On encountering antigen, often with help from T cells, B cells proliferate and differentiate into antibody-secreting plasma cells and memory B cells, producing the soluble immunoglobulins that mediate humoral immunity.
Definition
B-cell development is the bone-marrow differentiation of lymphoid progenitors into mature B cells through immunoglobulin gene rearrangement and tolerance checkpoints, and antibody production is the antigen-driven differentiation of activated B cells into plasma cells that secrete immunoglobulins of defined specificity and class.
Scope
This topic covers B-cell development in the bone marrow, B-cell-receptor assembly and tolerance, T-dependent and T-independent activation, the differentiation of plasma and memory cells, and antibody class switching. It is a mechanistic reference entry and does not provide clinical guidance.
Core questions
- How is the diverse B-cell-receptor repertoire generated and rendered self-tolerant in the bone marrow?
- How do B cells become activated, and what is the role of T-cell help?
- How do activated B cells differentiate into plasma cells and memory B cells?
- How does class switch recombination change antibody isotype without changing specificity?
Key concepts
- Immunoglobulin gene rearrangement (V(D)J recombination)
- B-cell receptor (membrane immunoglobulin)
- Central B-cell tolerance and receptor editing
- T-dependent versus T-independent activation
- Plasma cell differentiation
- Memory B cells
- Class switch recombination (isotype switching)
- Antibody effector functions
Mechanisms
In the bone marrow, B-lineage progenitors sequentially rearrange immunoglobulin heavy- and light-chain genes to express a unique B-cell receptor; immature B cells that bind self-antigen strongly are deleted, anergized, or revise their receptor through receptor editing. Mature naive B cells recirculate and, on binding antigen, become activated. Most protein antigens elicit T-dependent responses in which helper T cells provide CD40 ligand and cytokines, driving robust proliferation, germinal-centre formation, and the generation of high-affinity, class-switched antibody together with memory B cells and long-lived plasma cells. Some antigens, such as repetitive polysaccharides, can activate B cells with little T-cell help. Class switch recombination, initiated by activation-induced cytidine deaminase, changes the antibody's constant region — and thus its effector functions — while preserving antigen specificity [lebien-tedder-2008][victora-2012][stavnezer-2008].
Clinical relevance
B-cell biology underlies antibody-based vaccine protection, humoral immunodeficiencies, antibody-mediated autoimmunity, and B-cell malignancies, and it frames the rationale for therapies that deplete or modulate B cells. The entry is for conceptual reference and education only and does not provide diagnostic or treatment recommendations for any individual.
History
The division of lymphocytes into thymus-derived (T) and bursa- or bone-marrow-derived (B) lineages clarified that antibody production is the province of B cells. Tonegawa's discovery of immunoglobulin gene rearrangement explained how a limited genome yields enormous antibody diversity, and later work identified activation-induced cytidine deaminase as the enzyme central to class switching and somatic hypermutation, completing the mechanistic picture of antibody responses [lebien-tedder-2008][stavnezer-2008].
Key figures
- Frank Macfarlane Burnet
- Susumu Tonegawa
- Tasuku Honjo
- Max Cooper
Related topics
Seminal works
- lebien-tedder-2008
- stavnezer-2008
- victora-2012
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between a B cell and a plasma cell?
- A B cell carries membrane-bound immunoglobulin as its antigen receptor; once activated and differentiated, a plasma cell is a terminally differentiated B cell specialized to secrete large amounts of soluble antibody of the same specificity.
- What is class switching?
- Class switch recombination changes the constant region of an antibody (for example from IgM to IgG, IgA, or IgE), altering its effector functions and tissue distribution while keeping the antigen-binding specificity unchanged.