Title of article :
Advantage of having regulatory T cells requires localized suppression of immune reactions
Author/Authors :
Saeki، نويسنده , , Koichi and Iwasa، نويسنده , , Yoh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
The immune system of vertebrates may attack its own body and cause autoimmunity diseases. To prevent autoimmunity, regulatory T cells suppress the activity of the autoreactive effector T cells, but they also interrupt normal immune reactions against foreign antigens. In this paper, we discuss the advantage of having some regulatory T cells by considering the hostʹs ability of coping with foreign antigens and the harm of autoimmunity. Assumptions are as follows: the immature T cells reactive to abundant self-antigens are eliminated, those reactive to rare self-antigen will become regulatory T cells, and those that fail to interact with the antigens to which they are reactive will become effector T cells. Some self-reactive immature T cells may fail to interact with their own target antigens during the limited training period, and will later become effector T cells, causing autoimmunity. Analysis suggests that, having some regulatory T cells can never be advantageous to the host, if activated regulatory T cells suppress effector T cells at any location of the body (global suppression). In contrast, producing some regulatory T cells can be beneficial, if the body is composed of many compartments and regulatory T cells suppress the immune reactions only within the same compartment (localized suppression). This requires regulatory T cells to stop circulating once they are activated by their own target self-antigens.
Keywords :
Experience-dependent differentiation , Localized suppression , Pre-determined differentiation , Regulatory T cells , Autoimmunity
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology