Department of Immunobiology, Yale University School of Medicine, 300 Cedar St., TACS641B, P.O. Box 208011, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Immunol Res. 2009;45(1):46-61. doi: 10.1007/s12026-008-8027-z.
Following infection or vaccination T cells expand exponentially and differentiate into effector T cells in order to control infection and coordinate the multiple effector arms of the immune system. Soon after this expansion, the majority of antigen-specific T cells die to reattain homeostasis and a small pool of memory T cells forms to provide long-term immunity to subsequent re-infection. Our understanding of how this process is controlled has improved considerably over the recent years, but many questions remain outstanding. This review focuses on the recent advancements in this area with an emphasis on how the contraction of activated T cells is coordinately regulated by a combination of factors extrinsic and intrinsic to the activated T cells.
在感染或接种疫苗后,T 细胞会呈指数级扩增并分化为效应 T 细胞,以控制感染并协调免疫系统的多个效应器臂。在这种扩张之后不久,大多数抗原特异性 T 细胞会死亡以恢复体内平衡,并形成一小部分记忆 T 细胞,为随后的再感染提供长期免疫力。近年来,我们对这一过程如何受到控制的理解有了很大的提高,但仍有许多悬而未决的问题。这篇综述重点介绍了这一领域的最新进展,强调了激活的 T 细胞如何通过组合其内在和外在因素来协调收缩。