Ahmed A, Smith A H
Crit Rev Immunol. 1983;4(1):19-94.
One of the greatest challenges that has confronted the cellular biologist for the past decade has been the understanding of the basic mechanisms that underlie the interaction of antigen with the cell surface and the subsequent cell-to-cell interaction that follows through a chain of events to what constitutes an immune response. The dialogue of the cell-surface membrane between antigen and cell-surface recognition structures is of fundamental importance in the determination of the pathway that leads through a chain of precise, genetically regulated steps of differentiation. This insight of the molecular level has provided the basis for our current thinking. It demonstrates that the cell membrane surfaces are genetically defined and regulated and that immunobiologic mechanisms are fundamentally interconnected. The membrane and its structure serve a very important function, both in terms of conducting biological dialogue at the cell surface and the translation of this dialogue to physiological events that lead to limiting, suppressing, or controlling an immune response, as opposed to permitting, inducing, or overwhelming an immune response. These concepts are aligned with the Burnet's clonal selection theory of immunity. One of the inevitable assumptions of this theory is that heterogeneity of lymphocytes exists at the level of cell-surface antigen receptors. Similarly, the variety of responses, both cell-mediated and humoral, against a specific antigen implies that functional heterogeneity of lymphocytes also exists. Thus, an understanding of the immune system should incorporate those features of lymphocytes which govern immune recognition and those that relate to subsequent immune function. Over the past decade, evidence has been accumulating that there is considerable heterogeneity among lymphoid cell subpopulations. Our current understanding of this degree of heterogeneity largely stems from the discovery of cell-surface markers which are unique to subpopulations of lymphoid cells and the observation that certain specific immunologically mediated events are predominantly, if not exclusively, expressed by some lymphoid cells but not others. These studies have been further extended by the description of the sequential ontogenetic appearance of the cell-surface markers as relation to the acquisition of immune competence. The purpose of this review is to summarize our current knowledge of the cell-surface markers that are present on lymphoid cells.
在过去十年中,细胞生物学家面临的最大挑战之一,是理解抗原与细胞表面相互作用的基本机制,以及随后通过一系列事件发生的细胞间相互作用,这些事件构成了免疫反应。抗原与细胞表面识别结构之间在细胞表面膜上的对话,对于确定通过一系列精确的、基因调控的分化步骤的途径至关重要。这种分子水平的见解为我们目前的思考提供了基础。它表明细胞膜表面是由基因定义和调控的,免疫生物学机制在根本上是相互关联的。膜及其结构发挥着非常重要的作用,这不仅体现在细胞表面进行生物对话方面,还体现在将这种对话转化为生理事件,从而导致限制、抑制或控制免疫反应,而不是允许、诱导或引发过度的免疫反应。这些概念与伯内特的克隆选择免疫理论相一致。该理论不可避免的一个假设是,淋巴细胞的异质性存在于细胞表面抗原受体水平。同样,针对特定抗原的细胞介导和体液反应的多样性意味着淋巴细胞也存在功能异质性。因此,对免疫系统的理解应该纳入那些控制免疫识别的淋巴细胞特征以及与后续免疫功能相关的特征。在过去十年中,越来越多的证据表明淋巴细胞亚群之间存在相当大的异质性。我们目前对这种异质性程度的理解很大程度上源于发现了淋巴细胞亚群特有的细胞表面标志物,以及观察到某些特定的免疫介导事件主要(如果不是唯一)由一些淋巴细胞而非其他淋巴细胞表达。通过描述细胞表面标志物与免疫能力获得相关的连续个体发育出现情况,这些研究得到了进一步扩展。本综述的目的是总结我们目前对淋巴细胞上存在的细胞表面标志物的认识。