[HTML][HTML] T cell regulation by the environment

DA Hafler, AL Astier - Frontiers in Immunology, 2015 - frontiersin.org
Frontiers in Immunology, 2015frontiersin.org
T cell responses are initiated by ligation of their cognate T cell receptor by MHC loaded with
antigenic peptide, but their response is carefully controlled by a myriad of environmental
cues, including co-activation receptors, cytokines, nutrients, growth factors, local oxygen
levels, salt concentrations, and microbiome. The complexity of the integration of signals
received by T cells is only beginning to be fully understood (1). This research topic in T cell
biology aims at highlighting some of the latest research on intrinsic and extrinsic signals …
T cell responses are initiated by ligation of their cognate T cell receptor by MHC loaded with antigenic peptide, but their response is carefully controlled by a myriad of environmental cues, including co-activation receptors, cytokines, nutrients, growth factors, local oxygen levels, salt concentrations, and microbiome. The complexity of the integration of signals received by T cells is only beginning to be fully understood (1). This research topic in T cell biology aims at highlighting some of the latest research on intrinsic and extrinsic signals regulating T cell responses. The ebook contains 10 articles that encompass key pathways that modulate T cell function and discuss how T cells coordinate their response to environmental cues.
One of the first components regulating T cell activation is the expression and subsequent activation of surface receptors. Notably, T cell activation is governed by the co-activation of the TCR and of co-stimulatory or co-inhibitory molecules (2, 3). Expression and activation of co-inhibitory molecules, such as CTLA-4 and PD1 play a key part in turning off effector responses and the balance of expression of co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory receptors needs to be tightly regulated to ensure a proper level of T cell activation (4, 5). The review by Schneider and Rudd nicely illustrates how expression of the co-inhibitory molecule CTLA-4 is regulated, and how that affects T cell activation (6).
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