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CD27 on human memory B cells–more than just a surface marker

Ola Grimsholm

2022Clinical & Experimental Immunology48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Immunological memory protects the human body from re-infection with an earlier recognized pathogen. This memory comprises the durable serum antibody titres provided by long-lived plasma cells and the memory T and B cells with help from other cells. Memory B cells are the main precursor cells for new plasma cells during a secondary infection. Their formation starts very early in life, and they continue to form and undergo refinements throughout our lifetime. While the heterogeneity of the human memory B-cell pool is still poorly understood, specific cellular surface markers define most of the cell subpopulations. CD27 is one of the most commonly used markers to define human memory B cells. In addition, there are molecular markers, such as somatic mutations in the immunoglobulin heavy and light chains and isotype switching to, for example, IgG. Although not every memory B cell undergoes somatic hypermutation or isotype switching, most of them express these molecular traits in adulthood. In this review, I will focus on the most recent knowledge regarding CD27+ human memory B cells in health and disease, and describe how Ig sequencing can be used as a tool to decipher the evolutionary pathways of these cells.

Topics & Concepts

Somatic hypermutationMemory B cellBiologyImmunologyAntibodyNaive B cellImmunoglobulin class switchingIsotypeB cellB-1 cellSomatic cellGeneticsCell biologyT cellImmune systemAntigen-presenting cellGeneMonoclonal antibodyT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmunodeficiency and Autoimmune DisordersImmune Cell Function and Interaction
CD27 on human memory B cells–more than just a surface marker | Litcius