Germain R N, Stefanová I
Lymphocyte Biology Section, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Annu Rev Immunol. 1999;17:467-522. doi: 10.1146/annurev.immunol.17.1.467.
T cells constantly sample their environment using receptors (TCR) that possess both a germline-encoded low affinity for major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules and a highly diverse set of CDR3 regions contributing to a range of affinities for specific peptides bound to these MHC molecules. The decision of a T cell "to sense and to respond" with proliferation and effector activity rather than "to sense, live on, but not respond" is dependent on TCR interaction with a low number of specific foreign peptide:MHC molecule complexes recognized simultaneously with abundant self peptide-containing complexes. Interaction with self-complexes alone, on the other hand, generates a signal for survival without a full activation response. Current models for how this distinction is achieved are largely based on translating differences in receptor affinity for foreign versus self ligands into intracellular signals that differ in quality, intensity, and/or duration. A variety of rate-dependent mechanisms involving assembly of molecular oligomers and enzymatic modification of proteins underlie this differential signaling. Recent advances have been made in measuring TCR:ligand interactions, in understanding the biochemical origin of distinct proximal and distal signaling events resulting from TCR binding to various ligands, and in appreciating the role of feedback pathways. This new information can be synthesized into a model of how self and foreign ligand recognition each evoke the proper responses from T cells, how these two classes of signaling events interact, and how pathologic responses may arise as a result of the underlying properties of the system. The principles of signal spreading and stochastic resonance incorporated into this model reveal a striking similarity in mechanisms of decision-making among T cells, neurons, and bacteria.
T细胞通过受体(TCR)持续监测其周围环境,这些受体对主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)分子具有种系编码的低亲和力,并且具有高度多样化的互补决定区3(CDR3)区域,这些区域对与这些MHC分子结合的特定肽具有一系列亲和力。T细胞“感知并做出反应”(通过增殖和效应器活性)而非“感知、存活但不反应”的决定,取决于TCR与少量特定的外来肽:MHC分子复合物的相互作用,同时还会识别大量含自身肽的复合物。另一方面,仅与自身复合物相互作用会产生存活信号,但不会引发完全激活反应。目前关于如何实现这种区分的模型,很大程度上基于将受体对外来与自身配体亲和力的差异转化为质量、强度和/或持续时间不同的细胞内信号。涉及分子寡聚体组装和蛋白质酶促修饰的各种速率依赖性机制是这种差异信号传导的基础。在测量TCR:配体相互作用、理解TCR与各种配体结合导致的不同近端和远端信号事件的生化起源以及认识反馈途径的作用方面,最近都取得了进展。这些新信息可以整合到一个模型中,该模型解释了自身和外来配体识别如何分别从T细胞引发适当反应、这两类信号事件如何相互作用,以及由于系统的潜在特性可能如何引发病理反应。纳入该模型的信号传播和随机共振原理揭示了T细胞、神经元和细菌决策机制之间惊人的相似性。