Aa. Mamchak et Pd. Hodgkin, THE ONE SIGNAL THEORY OF B-CELL ACTIVATION REVISITED - A ROLE FOR SURFACE-IMMUNOGLOBULIN IN REGULATING T-INDEPENDENT ANTIBODY-RESPONSES, Immunology and cell biology, 73(3), 1995, pp. 266-271
Early theories of antibody production by B cells achieved considerable
success in predicting B cell behaviour with simple deductive models.
One such model, the one signal theory, postulated that the antigen rec
eptor on B cells played only a passive non-signalling role in focusing
non-specific activating signals to the B cell surface. This predictio
n is at least partially consistent with recent discoveries concerning
the helper signals delivered to B cells by T cells. Here, we re-examin
e the foundation of this theoretical prediction with the benefit of re
cent information. The experimental basis for the theory was a study of
B cell activation by LPS and, in particular, the interpretation of a
bell-shaped dose-response curve. The logic applied is appropriate to e
xplain some, but not all, forms of B cell behaviour because, as is now
clear, the role played by the antigen signal varies depending upon th
e method of activation. This re-examination suggests an alternative in
terpretation of the LPS-induced bell-shaped curves that incorporates a
role for an antigen signal. If correct, the mechanism would ensure th
at T-independent responses are drawn from low affinity precursors.