Nature versus nurture: Contributions of developmental programming and the microenvironment to B cell tolerance
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Immunology & Cell Biology
- Vol. 76 (4) , 369-372
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1711.1998.00755.x
Abstract
The original Burnet–Lederberg and Bretscher–Cohn models of immunological tolerance are essentially incompatible, one considering tolerance to be the obligatory outcome of antigen recognition by an immature lymphocyte and the other considering it as one of two possible responses to antigen, the crucial determinant being interaction with a second antigen-reactive cell. The early experimental evidence was confusing, in that it appeared to support both theories. In response to this situation, a hybrid model retaining some of the features of the original models was proposed. In particular, immature B cells were regarded as ‘hypersensitive to tolerance induction’, but could also make a positive response to antigen under some circumstances. More recent data from B cell transgenic mice have challenged even these hybrid models, stimulating renewed interest in the question of how B cell tolerance is regulated in vivo. This article presents a new interpretation of the data, in which the increased resistance of mature B cells to tolerance induction is postulated to result from partial receptor desensitization in response to environmental antigen, rather than from a developmentally programmed change in B cell signalling. Thus, it is suggested that Burnet's ‘window of tolerance induction’ is determined by the environment rather than developmental pre-programming. If this postulate is accepted, induction of B cell self-tolerance in both the bone marrow and periphery follows the simple and elegant rules originally laid down by Bretscher and Cohn.Keywords
Funding Information
- Wellcome Trust
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Outer Periarteriolar Lymphoid Sheath Arrest and Subsequent Differentiation of Both Naive and Tolerant Immunoglobulin Transgenic B Cells Is Determined by B Cell Receptor OccupancyThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- Influences on the lifespan of B cell subpopulations defined by different phenotypesEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1997
- B cells are exquisitely sensitive to central tolerance and receptor editing induced by ultralow affinity, membrane-bound antigen.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- The “Clonal Selection Hypothesis” and Current Concepts of B Cell ToleranceImmunity, 1996
- Regulation of B-lymphocyte negative and positive selection by tyrosine phosphatase CD45Nature, 1996
- The fate of self-reactive B cells depends primarily on the degree of antigen receptor engagement and availability of T cell help.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1996
- Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1C negatively regulates antigen receptor signaling in B lymphocytes and determines thresholds for negative selectionImmunity, 1995
- Induction of Self-Rolerance in T Cells But Not B Cells of Transgenic Mice Expressing Little Self AntigenScience, 1991
- THE IMMUNOLOGICAL RESPONSE OF FOETAL MICE TO INFLUENZA VIRUSImmunology & Cell Biology, 1957
- THE COMPARATIVE SUSCEPTIBILITY OF FETAL AND POSTNATAL GUINEA PIGS TO THE VIRUS OF EPIDEMIC INFLUENZAThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1940