B cells are lymphocytes that play a large role in the humoral immune response (as opposed to the cell-mediated immune response). The abbreviation "B" stands for the bursa of Fabricius which is an organ unique to birds, where avian B cells mature. It does not stand for bone marrow, where B cells are produced in all other vertebrates except for rabbits (where B cells develop in the appendix-sacculus rotundus).
The human body makes millions of different types of B cells each day, and each type has a unique receptor protein (referred to as the B cell receptor (BCR)) on its membrane that will bind to one particular antigen; at any one time in the human body millions of B cells are circulating in the blood and lymph, but are not producing antibodies. Once a B cell encounters its cognate antigen and receives an additional signal from a helper T cell, it can further differentiate into one of the two types of B cells listed below. The B cell can either directly become one of these cell types or go through an intermediate differentiation step - the germinal center reaction where the B cell will hypermutate the variable region of the antibody and possibly class switch.
Humoral immunity (the creation of antibodies that circulate in blood plasma and lymph) involves B cell activation. Cell activation can be gauged using the ELISPOT technique, which can determine the percentage of B cells that secrete any particular antibody.
B cells are characterised immunohistochemically in humans by the presence of CD20 on the cell membrane. In mice, CD45 (B220) is often used.
A critical difference between B cells and T cells is how each cell "sees" an antigen. B cells recognize their cognate antigen in its native form. In contrast, T cells recognize their cognate antigen in a processed form - as a peptide in the context of an MHC molecule.
Susumu Tonegawa won the 1987 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for demonstrating how B cells create the enormous diversity of antibodies from only a few genes. The Nobel presentation * gives an overview.
When the B cells fails in any step of the maturation process, it will undergo apoptosis, and if it recognizes self-antigen during the maturation process, it will become suppressed (known as anergy) or undergo apoptosis.
B cells are continuously produced in the bone marrow, but only a small portion of newly made B cells survive to participate a part in the long-lived peripheral B cell pool.
B-Lymphozyt | Linfocito B | Lymphocyte B | B세포 | לימפוציט B | B limfocitai | B-cel | B細胞 | Linfócitos B | B-лимфоциты | B-solu | B hücresi | B细胞