Negative regulators in homeostasis of naïve peripheral T cells
- 15 April 2008
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Immunologic Research
- Vol. 41 (2) , 137-153
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12026-008-8017-1
Abstract
It is now apparent that naïve peripheral T cells are a dynamic population where active processes prevent inappropriate activation while supporting survival. The process of thymic education makes naïve peripheral T cells dependent on interactions with self-MHC for survival. However, as these signals can potentially result in inappropriate activation, various non-redundant, intrinsic negative regulatory molecules including Tob, Nfatc2, and Smad3 actively enforce T cell quiescence. Interactions among these pathways are only now coming to light and may include positive or negative crosstalk. In the case of positive crosstalk, self-MHC initiated signals and intrinsic negative regulatory factors may cooperate to dampen T cell activation and sustain peripheral tolerance in a binary fashion (on–off). In the case of negative crosstalk, self-MHC signals may promote survival through partial activation while intrinsic negative regulatory factors act as rheostats to restrain cell cycle entry and prevent T cells from crossing a threshold that would break tolerance.Keywords
This publication has 116 references indexed in Scilit:
- An intense form of homeostatic proliferation of naive CD8+ cells driven by IL-2The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2007
- Naive CD8+ T cells differentiate into protective memory-like cells after IL-2–anti–IL-2 complex treatment in vivoThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2007
- MHC class II deprivation impairs CD4 T cell motility and responsiveness to antigen-bearing dendritic cells in vivoProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Inability of memory T cells to induce graft-versus-host disease is a result of an abortive alloresponseBlood, 2006
- Dysregulation of IL-15-mediated T-cell homeostasis in TGF-β dominant-negative receptor transgenic miceBlood, 2006
- Massive and destructive T cell response to homeostatic cue in CD24-deficient lymphopenic hostsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2006
- IAN Family Critically Regulates Survival and Development of T LymphocytesPLoS Biology, 2006
- Control of homeostatic proliferation by regulatory T cellsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2005
- Anoikis mechanismsCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 2001
- Targeted disruption of the mouse transforming growth factor-β1 gene results in multifocal inflammatory diseaseNature, 1992