Bluestone Jeffrey A, Abbas Abul K
Diabetes Research Center, University of California, San Francisco, California 94118, USA.
Nat Rev Immunol. 2003 Mar;3(3):253-7. doi: 10.1038/nri1032.
The regulation of immune responses to self-antigens is a complex process that involves maintaining self-tolerance while retaining the capacity to mount robust immune responses against invading microorganisms. Over the past few years, many new insights into this process have been gained, leading to the re-emergence of the idea that regulatory T (T(Reg)) cells are a central mechanism of immune regulation. These insights have raised fundamental questions concerning what constitutes a T(Reg) cell, where they develop and what signals maintain T(Reg)-cell populations in a functional state. Here, we propose the existence of two subsets of CD4+ T(Reg) cells--natural and adaptive--that differ in terms of their development, specificity, mechanism of action and dependence on T-cell receptor and co-stimulatory signalling.
对自身抗原免疫反应的调节是一个复杂的过程,它涉及维持自身耐受性,同时保留对入侵微生物产生强大免疫反应的能力。在过去几年里,人们对这一过程有了许多新的认识,这使得调节性T(T(Reg))细胞是免疫调节核心机制的观点再度兴起。这些认识引发了一些基本问题,即什么构成T(Reg)细胞、它们在哪里发育以及哪些信号使T(Reg)细胞群体维持在功能状态。在此,我们提出存在两类CD4+ T(Reg)细胞亚群——天然性和适应性——它们在发育、特异性、作用机制以及对T细胞受体和共刺激信号的依赖性方面存在差异。