IMM250H1 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Lymphopoiesis, Adaptive Immune System, T Cell

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10 Mar 2018
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In contrast, t cell maturation occurs in the thymus: both the bone marrow and thymus are considered primary lymphoid organs because they are the sites where lymphocytes undergo their development from precursor cells. After a b or t lymphocyte expresses its antigen receptor it is released into the blood circulation as a mature lymphocyte. In contrast, the tcr recognizes only protein antigens, and furthermore, these are not recognized in an intact form: once a b cell is activated by antigen (left-side of fig. 4-7), it can differentiate into an effector cell known as an plasma cell, which is specialized to secrete large quantities of antibodies. These antibodies have the same structure and specificity as the bcr on the surface of the activated b cell, so these secreted proteins bind the same antigen that triggered their production. They are secreted from the plasma cell because they are produced without the transmembrane region that would otherwise anchor the protein in cellular membranes.

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