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微生物寄生虫与发育中的T细胞:一场对胸腺退化时机和HIV发病机制有影响的进化“军备竞赛”。

Microbial parasites versus developing T cells: an evolutionary 'arms race' with implications for the timing of thymic involution and HIV pathogenesis.

作者信息

Turke P W

机构信息

College of Human Medicine, Michigan State University, USA.

出版信息

Thymus. 1994;24(1):29-40.

PMID:8629277
Abstract

The thymus attempts to ensure that T cells which emerge from it are able to discriminate self from nonself. As such, it is a potential 'backdoor' through which microbial parasites can enter, manipulate the host into perceiving them as 'self', and thereby avoid immune surveillance. It is proposed that the host has evolved to overcome this parasitic strategy by rapidly producing large numbers of long-lived T cells very early in life (closing the backdoor), before the developing individual has significant contact with infectious organisms, and while still under the protection of its mother's intact immune system. Hence the capacity of the thymus to function efficiently early in the lifespan would have been strongly favored by natural selection. It is well established in evolutionary biology that strong selection favoring enhanced early function easily accommodates, through pleiotropy, the accumulation of later occurring negative effects, and it is through this process that thymic involution and subsequent immune system senescence may have evolved. Once a large pool of competent T cells has been produced, even those microbes capable of contaminating the thymus usually can be eliminated, or at least contained. However, microbes that both destroy peripheral T cells (particularly peripheral T cells that are activated against them), and contaminate the thymus (leading to deletion of potential replacements of the destroyed peripheral cells), may be able to eventually overcome the immune system, thus producing disease after a long period of apparent latency. Human immunodeficiency virus, which is initially well controlled by the immune system, may become unleashed via this process.

摘要

胸腺试图确保由其产生的T细胞能够区分自身与非自身。因此,它是微生物寄生虫可能进入的一个潜在“后门”,寄生虫可操纵宿主将它们视为“自身”,从而逃避免疫监视。有人提出,宿主已经进化出一种机制来克服这种寄生策略,即在生命早期迅速产生大量长寿T细胞(关闭后门),此时发育中的个体尚未与感染性生物体有大量接触,且仍处于其母亲完整免疫系统的保护之下。因此,胸腺在寿命早期高效发挥功能的能力会受到自然选择的强烈青睐。进化生物学中已明确,强烈选择有利于增强早期功能,通过基因多效性,很容易容纳后期出现的负面影响的积累,胸腺退化及随后的免疫系统衰老可能就是通过这一过程进化而来的。一旦产生了大量有功能的T细胞,即使那些能够污染胸腺的微生物通常也能被清除,或至少得到控制。然而,那些既能破坏外周T细胞(特别是针对它们被激活的外周T细胞),又能污染胸腺(导致被破坏的外周细胞的潜在替代细胞被清除)的微生物,最终可能会战胜免疫系统,从而在长时间的明显潜伏期后引发疾病。最初由免疫系统良好控制的人类免疫缺陷病毒可能会通过这一过程肆虐。

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