Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function I

Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function I

Proper development and differentiation of B lymphocytes is es sential to ensure that an organism has the ability to mount an effective humoral immune response against foreign antigens.

Author: Louis B. Justement

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783642570667

Category: Medical

Page: 267

View: 436

Proper development and differentiation of B lymphocytes is es sential to ensure that an organism has the ability to mount an effective humoral immune response against foreign antigens. The immune system must maintain a balance between the deletion of harmful self-reactive B cells and the generation of a diverse rep ertoire of B cells that has the ability to recognize an almost un limited array of foreign antigens. The need to delete self-reactive cells is tempered by the need to avoid the generation of large functional holes in the repertoire of foreign antigen-specific B cells that patrol the periphery. To accomplish this, the immune system must reach a compromise by eliminating only the most dangerous autoreactive clones, while allowing less harmful au toreactive B cells to exist in the periphery where they may com plement the organism's ability to mount a rapid response against invading micro-organisms. Those autoreactive cells that do enter the peripheral pool are subject to a number of conditional re straints that effectively attenuate their ability to respond to self antigens. Deleterious alterations in the homeostasis between tolerance induction and recruitment of B cells into the functional repertoire may lead to increased susceptibility to autoimmune disease or infection, respectively. Therefore, delineation of the molecular processes that maintain immunological homeostasis in the B cell compartment is critical.
Categories: Medical

Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II

Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II

This volume provides a review of current research in the field of B cell development and differentiation with particular emphasis on signal transduction processes.

Author: Louis B. Justement

Publisher: Springer

ISBN: 364259641X

Category: Medical

Page: 0

View: 665

This volume provides a review of current research in the field of B cell development and differentiation with particular emphasis on signal transduction processes. The volume is divided into two parts that focus, respectively, on the basic biochemical pathways which regulate B cell biology and the role of signal transduction processes in regulating various aspects of B cell function, development and differentiation. In this second part the molecular processes involved in translating BCR engagement to specific biological outcomes are reviewed. Topics covered in this part include signal transduction via the pre-B cell antigen receptor complex, the control of immunoglobulin gene recombination and allelic exclusion, and molecular regulation of positive and negative selection. These latter chapters present information regarding processes which are critical for the B cell response to foreign antigen that leads to differentiation into antibody secreting plasma.
Categories: Medical

Molecular Analysis of B Lymphocyte Development and Activation

Molecular Analysis of B Lymphocyte Development and Activation

245/II: Justement, Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction on the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II. 2000. 13 figs. XV, 172 pp. ISBN 3-540-66003-8 Vol. 246: Melchers, Fritz; Potter, ...

Author: Harinder Singh

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783540263630

Category: Medical

Page: 260

View: 294

The B lymphocyte lineage represents an important paradigm for exploring the molecular mechanisms underlying cell fate specification, differentiation and cellular activation. In the past five years, major advances have been achieved in our understanding of the transcriptional control of early B cell development and terminal plasma cell differentiation. In addition new insights became available for the processes of B cell activation, class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation. Many of the new findings and their implications for a molecular understanding of B cell biology in particular and cell differentiation in general are covered in this volume.
Categories: Medical

Signalling from Internalised Growth Factor Receptors

Signalling from Internalised Growth Factor Receptors

22 figs. XVI, 274 pp. ISBN 3-540-66002-X Vol. 245/ll: Justement, Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction on the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II. 2000. 13 figs. XV, 172 pp.

Author: Inger Helene Madshus

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783540694946

Category: Medical

Page: 190

View: 460

This book reviews knowledge on the interconnection of signal transduction and endocytosis/intracellular trafficking. The chapters cover knowledge obtained by using different model systems. The first chapter deals with Receptor Tyrosin Kinases (RTKs) with emphasis on the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGF receptor) and the Platelet Derived Growth Factor Receptor (PDGF receptor). The second chapter deals with the RTK c-Met and with how this RTK becomes carcinogenic. The third chapter reviews recent understanding on the mechanisms of action of the numerous fibroblast growth factors and their receptors. In the fourth chapter we learn about the trafficking of and signalling from the Growth Hormone Receptor and how this receptor is controlled by ubiquitination. The fifth chapter is devoted to the Interleukin II receptor, essential for activation of T cells. Links between ubiquitination, signalling, endocytosis, and sorting are reviewed. The last chapter discusses current views on how monoubiquitination controls both signalling and trafficking and thereby the final outcome of receptor activation.
Categories: Medical

Role of Apoptosis in Infection

Role of Apoptosis in Infection

245/I: Justement, Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function I. 2000. 22 figs. XVI, 274 pp. ISBN 3-540-66002-X Vol. 245/II: Justement, Louis B.; ...

Author: Diane E. Griffin

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783540273202

Category: Medical

Page: 296

View: 449

(will follow)
Categories: Medical

Arenaviruses II

Arenaviruses II

245/l: Justement, Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction and the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function I. 2000. 22 figs. XVI, 274 pp. ISBN 3-540-66002-X Vol. 245/II: Justement, Louis B.; ...

Author: M.B.A. Oldstone

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783642560552

Category: Medical

Page: 270

View: 972

Viruses are studied either because they cause significant human, animal or plant disease or because they are useful materials for probing basic phenomena in biology, chemistry, genetics and/or molecular biology. Arenaviruses are unusually interesting in that they occupy both categories. Arenaviruses cause several human diseases known primarily as the hemorrhagic fevers occurring in South and Latin America (Bolivia: Machupo, Argentine, Junin virus, and Brazil: Sabia virus) and in Africa (Lassa fever virus). Because such viruses produce profound disabilities and often kill the persons they infect, they are a source of health concern and economic hardship in the countries where they are prevalent. Further, they provide new problems for healthcare persons owing to the narrowing of the world as visitors from many countries travel increasingly to and from endemic areas and may incubate the infectious agent taking it from an endemic area into an area where the virus is not expected. Such cases are now being re corded with increasing frequency. In addition to these hemor rhagic fever viruses, the arenavirus lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) can infect humans worldwide, although the illness is most often less disabling and severe than those elicited by the other arenaviruses. Yet, LCMV is of greater concern to non arenavirologists and experimentalists using tissue culture or ani mals, etc. , because normal-appearing cultured cells or tissues from animals used for research may be persistently infected with LCMV without manifesting clinical disease or cytopathology and may transmit that infection to laboratory workers.
Categories: Medical

Regeneration Stem Cells and Beyond

Regeneration  Stem Cells and Beyond

ISBN 3-540-65048-2 Vol. 239: Vogt, Peter K.; Jackson, ... 245/II: Justement, Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction on the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II. 2000. 13 figs. XV, 172 pp.

Author: Ellen Heber-Katz

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783642188466

Category: Science

Page: 196

View: 639

In this issue of Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology the authors present a unique range of examples of the regenerative response and the role of stem cells from the amphibian to human. It seems that all roads lead to cells that have the plasticity to become something else, not only in the amphibian but also in the mammal.
Categories: Science

Dendritic Cells and Virus Infection

Dendritic Cells and Virus Infection

245/11 : Justement , Louis B .; Siminovitch , Katherine A. ( Eds . ) : Signal Transduction on the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II . 2000 . 13 figs . XV , 172 pp . ISBN 3-540-66003-8 Vol .

Author: Alexander Steinkasserer

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 3540442901

Category: Medical

Page: 318

View: 629

Dendritic cells are vital to induce potent anti-viral immune responses. It will become clear to the reader that dendritic cells often play a dual role during viral infections. On the one hand they are able to mount potent antiviral immune responses, and on the other hand several viruses, including HIV-1, use DC as a vector to be transferred from the periphery to the lymph nodes where they infect their prime target.
Categories: Medical

Adenoviruses Model and Vectors in Virus Host Interactions

Adenoviruses  Model and Vectors in Virus Host Interactions

230: Kärre, Klas; Colonna, Marco (Eds.): Specificity, Function, and Development of NK Cells. 1998. ... Louis B.; Siminovitch, Katherine A. (Eds.): Signal Transduction on the Coordination of B Lymphocyte Development and Function II.

Author: Walter Doerfler

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

ISBN: 9783662055991

Category: Medical

Page: 368

View: 764

After three volumes on adenoviruses in 1995 the past years have seen rapid progress in the field of adenovirus research. Moreover, adenoviruses have attracted considerable interest as vectors in gene transfer regimens. After the first volume on virion and structure, viral replication and host-cell interaction this second volume deals with the immune system, oncogenesis and gene therapy.
Categories: Medical