Perisinusoidal B cells in the bone marrow participate in T-independent responses to blood-borne microbes

Publication information:

Cariappa A, Mazo I, Chase C, Shi HN, Liu H, Li Q, Rose H, Leung H, Cherayil B, Russell P, et al. Perisinusoidal B cells in the bone marrow participate in T-independent responses to blood-borne microbes. Immunity. 2005;23(4):397–407. doi:10.1016/j.immuni.2005.09.004

Abstract

Mature recirculating B cells are generally assumed to exist in follicular niches in secondary lymphoid organs, and these cells mediate T-dependent humoral immune responses. We show here that a large proportion of mature B lymphocytes occupy an anatomically and functionally distinct perisinusoidal niche in the bone marrow. Perisinusoidal B cells circulate freely, as revealed by parabiosis studies. However, unlike their counterparts in the follicular niche, these cells are capable of being activated in situ by blood-borne microbes in a T-independent manner to generate specific IgM antibodies. The bone marrow represents a unique type of secondary lymphoid organ in which mature B cells are strategically positioned in the path of circulating microbes.