Yes, that's correct. The antigen independent phase is in the bone marrow. The antigen dependent phase is in secondary lymphoid tissue (which includes lymph nodes). The antigen dependent phase can be considered "Activation", but its all part of the continuous maturation process.
Thanks for this lecture but B cells full maturation occur in the bone marrow therefore, they called B referring to bone marrow and they exit form the bone marrow as mature naive B cell which migrate to the secondary lymphoid organs surveying for foreign antigens and when they meet that antigen they called mature B cell but not naive Also you do not point to the positive and negative selection which is an absolutely important process in B cell developement
Nice video but make it more clear.many of the words I can't understand.it would be nice if the picture and the labelling should be written little more bigger.
Why can't more teachers be helpful like this? They seem to make this stuff way more confusing than it has to be.
Thank you so much for this video, you literally went through a 3 hour lecture in 5 minutes. Absolute legend.
Yes, that's correct. The antigen independent phase is in the bone marrow. The antigen dependent phase is in secondary lymphoid tissue (which includes lymph nodes). The antigen dependent phase can be considered "Activation", but its all part of the continuous maturation process.
Sanjukta Ghosh i think activation comes first then the B cell can differentiate into a plasma cell
This was so helpful, I have an exam on this tomorrow! I'm going to redraw your awesome diagram.
10 year old comment 🫥
you have no idea how much you've helped!!! thank you so much sir!
Very great summary, simple, to the point, and easy to understand
Sir u are having an amazing teaching skill u told everything so comfortably with good pace to understand
I think you just saved my prelim grades THANK YOU SO MUCH
Wow a 2 hour lecture I didnt understand clear as day in 5 minutes
Your tutorial sir is not complicated. Thanks a lot
thank u , you save my life
you are brilliant thanks so much for your clear descriptive teaching
karen
Thank you so much for the video,it helps me a lot.
So Great! i'm painful that i didn't know you before!! Thank Youuu :D
U said one b cell produce only one type of immunoglobulin than how come mature b cell have both igm nd igd on their surface????
IgM and IgD will both have the same specificity
why are there 2 different BCRs on the same B cell ??
It think it is the same. The first is just the pre-BCR form, which then develops into the BCR
Any videos on osteoblasts and piezoelectricity ?? Thanks.
Thanks for the vid, this helps a lot.
Hold up, don't B cells mature in the bone marrow and then become activated in the lymph node?
Thanks for this lecture but B cells full maturation occur in the bone marrow therefore, they called B referring to bone marrow and they exit form the bone marrow as mature naive B cell which migrate to the secondary lymphoid organs surveying for foreign antigens and when they meet that antigen they called mature B cell but not naive
Also you do not point to the positive and negative selection which is an absolutely important process in B cell developement
awesome review thanks!
Thank you ❤️
Nice video but make it more clear.many of the words I can't understand.it would be nice if the picture and the labelling should be written little more bigger.
Thank you so much
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!
thank you sir!
Cudnt help but notice how your voice sounds a lot like the actor Paul Bettany! xD Great video btw
Thankyou!!
thank you sir
Thanks
Extrordjnary presentation
Thanks alot
Very helpful! thank you!
🎉❤❤❤ thanks
Thanks! :)