B cells
Revision as of 14:34, 13 August 2010 by Bara (talk | contribs) (Text replace - "B cell differentiation - WikiBlood" to "B cell differentiation")
Also called B lymphocytes
So named as they were initially found in the Bursa of Fabricius. They produce antibodies (Ig’s) and are associated with humoral immunity. They represent 20-30% of circulating lymphocytes. B cells have B cell receptors (BCR), or antigen binding sites. This is IgM when the B cell is immature, changing to IgD when the cell is mature. B cells also express MHC II, CD9, CD,19, CD20 and CD24.
Under antigenic stimulation they differentiate into plasma cells and memory cells.
B-cells also act as Antigen-Presenting Cells (APCs) by presenting digested fragments to T-cells on MHC II.
For more on B cell differentiation, see here.