Screen supernatants of each clone for
anti-X antibody and expand positive clones
Isolate clones derived from single hybridoma cells
Fig. 4.5 Generation of hybridomas and monoclonal antibodies. In this procedure, spleen cells from a
expanded and becomes a source of the monoclonal antibody.
82 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
bind many different types of chemical structures, often
with high affinities, which is why antibodies can bind
to and neutralize many different microbes and toxins
recognize peptide-MHC complexes and bind these
The three-dimensional structure of the TCR is similar
to that of the Fab region of an Ig molecule. In contrast
to membrane antibodies, in which only the heavy chain
is membrane-anchored, both TCR chains are anchored
in the plasma membrane. TCRs are not produced in a
secreted form and do not undergo isotype switching or
affinity maturation during the life of a T cell.
About 5% to 10% of T cells in the body express
receptors composed of gamma (?) and delta (d) chains.
CD20 Depletion of B cells Rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, other
autoimmune diseases; B cell lymphoma
IL-6 receptor Blocking inflammation Rheumatoid arthritis
IgE Blocking IgE function Allergy-related asthma
TNF Blocking inflammation Rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn disease,
CD52 Depletion of lymphocytes Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa Inhibition of platelet
Colorectal, lung, and head and neck cancers
CTLA-4 Activation of T cells Melanoma
PD-1 Activation of effector T cells Many tumors
Breast cancer, colon cancer, age-related
PD-L1 Activation of effector T cells Many tumors
HER2/Neu Inhibition of EGF signaling;
Inflammatory (immunological) diseases
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 83
These receptors are structurally similar to the aß TCR
but have very different specificities. The ?d TCR may
recognize a variety of protein and nonprotein antigens,
usually not displayed by classical MHC molecules.
T cells expressing ?d TCRs are abundant in epithelia. This
observation suggests that ?d T cells recognize microbes
usually encountered at epithelial surfaces, but neither the
natural killer T cells (NK-T cells). NK-T cells express aß
TCRs with limited diversity, and they recognize lipid
antigens displayed by nonpolymorphic class I MHC–like
molecules called CD1. A third subset of T cells called
mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells also express
to an MHC-like protein called MR1. MAIT cells account
for only about 5% of blood T cells, but up to 20%–40% of
human liver T cells. The physiologic functions of NK-T
cells and MAIT cells also are not well understood.
Now that we have discussed the structure of antigen
enormous diversity of these receptors is generated. As
the clonal selection hypothesis predicted, there are many
an encounter with antigen. There are not enough genes
in the human genome for every possible receptor to be
encoded by a different gene. In fact, the immune system
Copyright Cell Press; with permission.)
84 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
has developed mechanisms for generating extremely
diverse antigen receptors from a limited number of
inherited genes, and the generation of diverse receptors
is intimately linked to the process of B and T lymphocyte maturation.
what the receptors recognize, because recognition can
only occur after receptor generation and expression.
that promote the survival of cells with receptors that
can recognize antigens, such as microbial antigens, and
eliminate cells that cannot recognize any antigens or
recognize self antigens well enough to pose danger of
causing autoimmune disease. We discuss each of these
The development of lymphocytes from bone marrow
these progenitors, the rearrangement and expression
antigen receptors (Fig. 4.10). These steps are common
to B and T lymphocytes, even though B lymphocytes
mature in the bone marrow and T lymphocytes mature
in the thymus. Each of the processes that occurs during
lymphocyte maturation plays a special role in the generation of the lymphocyte repertoire.
• The maturation of common lymphoid progenitors
in the bone marrow results in commitment to the B
cell or T cell lineage. This commitment is associated
TCR genes to the gene recombination machinery,
• Developing lymphocytes undergo proliferation at
several stages during their maturation. Proliferation
of developing lymphocytes is necessary to ensure
that an adequate number of cells will be available
stimulated mainly by growth factors that are produced by stromal cells in the bone marrow and the
thymus. In humans, IL-7 maintains and expands
the number of T lymphocyte progenitors before
they express antigen receptors. The growth factors
required for expansion of human B cell progenitors
receptors may be produced. Even greater proliferation of the B and T cell lineages occurs after the
developing lymphocytes have completed their first
antigen receptor gene rearrangement and assembled
a so-called preantigen receptor (described later). This
step is a quality control checkpoint in lymphocyte
development that ensures preservation of cells with
• Lymphocytes are selected at multiple steps during their
maturation to preserve useful specificities. Selection
Fig. 4.8 Recognition of peptide-MHC complex by a T cell
by the MHC molecule. The peptide can be seen attached to
the cleft at the top of the MHC molecule, and one residue of
the peptide contacts the V region of a TCR. The structure of
MHC molecules and their function as peptide display proteins
are described in Chapter 3. MHC, Major histocompatibility
complex; TCR, T cell receptor; ß2m, ß2-microglobulin. (From
Bjorkman PJ: MHC restriction in three dimensions: a view of
T cell receptor/ligand interactions, Cell 89:167–170, 1997.
Copyright Cell Press; with permission.)
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 85
is based on the expression of intact antigen receptor
components and what they recognize. As discussed
later, many attempts to generate antigen receptors
fail because of errors during the gene recombination
process. Therefore, checkpoints are needed at which
only cells that can express functional components of
antigen receptors are selected to survive and proliferate. Prelymphocytes and immature lymphocytes
that fail to express antigen receptor proteins die by
apoptosis (see Fig. 4.10). The gene rearrangements in
of these may be incapable of recognizing antigens in
some affinity for MHC molecules in the thymus. This
process, called positive selection, ensures that cells
that complete maturation will be capable of recognizing microbial peptides displayed by the same MHC
Another selection process is needed to eliminate
these potentially dangerous lymphocytes and prevent
The processes of B and T lymphocyte maturation and
selection share some important features but also differ
in many respects. We start with the central event that
is common to both lineages: the recombination and
expression of antigen receptor genes.
Feature Antigen-binding molecule
Immunoglobulin (Ig) T cell receptor (TCR)
86 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
Production of Diverse Antigen Receptors
The formation of functional genes that encode B
and T lymphocyte antigen receptors is initiated by
somatic recombination of gene segments that code for
the variable regions of the receptors, and diversity is
generated during this process.
Inherited Antigen Receptor Genes
Hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow and early
lymphoid progenitors contain Ig and TCR genes in their
a chain and ß chain loci each contain multiple variable
region (V) gene segments, numbering about 30 to 45,
and one or a few constant region (C) genes (Fig. 4.11).
Between the V and C gene segments are groups of
several short coding sequences called diversity (D) and
joining (J) gene segments. (All antigen receptor gene
loci contain V, J, and C gene segments, but only the Ig
heavy chain and TCR ß chain loci also contain D gene
segments.) These separated gene segments cannot code
for functional antigen receptor proteins, so they have to
be brought together as lymphocytes mature.
Somatic Recombination and Expression of Antigen
The commitment of a lymphocyte progenitor to become
a B lymphocyte is associated with the recombination of
randomly selected gene segments in the Ig heavy-chain
locus—first one D gene segment with one J segment to
Commitment Proliferation Proliferation
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 87
Ig ? chain locus (chromosome 2)
Ig H chain locus (chromosome 14)
TCR a chain locus (chromosome 14)
TCR ß chain locus (chromosome 7)
Ig ? chain locus (chromosome 22)
Thus, the committed but still-developing B cell now
has a recombined VDJ exon in the heavy-chain locus.
the µ chain, the most 5' C region, to form a complete
µ messenger RNA (mRNA). The µ mRNA is translated
to produce the µ heavy chain, which is the first Ig protein synthesized during B cell maturation.
88 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
Fig. 4.12 Recombination and expression of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes. The expression of an Ig heavy
RNA (mRNA). The mRNA is translated to produce the µ heavy-chain protein. The recombination of other
recombines directly with a J gene segment.
Essentially the same sequence of DNA recombination and RNA splicing leads to production of a light
chain in B cells, except that the light-chain loci lack D
segments, so a V region exon recombines directly with
a J segment. The rearrangement of TCR a chain and ß
chain genes in T lymphocytes is similar to that of Ig L
Mechanisms of V(D)J Recombination
The somatic recombination of V and J, or of V, D,
and J, gene segments is mediated by a lymphoid-specific enzyme, the VDJ recombinase, and additional
enzymes, most of which are not lymphocyte specific
and are involved in repair of double-stranded DNA
breaks introduced by the recombinase. The VDJ
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 89
recombinase is composed of the recombination-activating gene 1 and 2 (RAG-1 and RAG-2) proteins. It
segments close together and cleaves the DNA at specific
VDJ recombinase is expressed only in immature B and
T lymphocytes. Although the same enzyme can mediate recombination of all Ig and TCR genes, intact Ig
heavy-chain and light-chain genes are rearranged and
expressed only in B cells, and TCR a and ß genes are
rearranged and expressed only in T cells. The lineage
specificity of receptor gene rearrangement appears to
factors “open” the Ig gene locus at the chromatin level
but not the TCR locus, whereas in developing T cells,
transcriptional regulators help open the TCR locus but
not the Ig locus. The “open” loci are the ones that are
accessible to the recombinase.
Generation of Ig and TCR Diversity
Diversity of antigen receptors is produced by the use
of different combinations of V, D, and J gene segments
is produced by three mechanisms, which generate more
sequences than are present in the germline genes:
• Exonucleases may remove nucleotides from V, D, and
J gene segments at the sites of recombination.
• A lymphocyte-specific enzyme called terminal
deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase (TdT) catalyzes the
random addition of nucleotides that are not part of
germline genes to the junctions between V and D
segments and D and J segments, forming so-called N
• During an intermediate stage in the process of V(D)J
recombination, the two broken strands of the DNA at
each end of the cut DNA form hairpin loops. As a first
step in the repair process, the loops are asymmetrically
cut, forming overhanging DNA sequences. These
overhangs have to be filled in with new nucleotides,
which are called P-nucleotides, introducing even more
variability at the sites of recombination.
As a result of these mechanisms, the nucleotide
from the sequence at the V(D)J site of antibody or TCR
molecules made by every other clone. These junctional
sequences and the D and J segments encode the amino
acids of the CDR3 loop, mentioned earlier as the most
the variability in the antigen-recognizing portions of
out-of-frame sequences that cannot code for proteins
and are therefore useless. This is the price the immune
system pays for generating tremendous diversity. The
risk of producing nonfunctional genes also is why the
process of lymphocyte maturation contains checkpoints
at which only cells with useful receptors are selected to
and reactive proliferations of B and T lymphocytes. In
tumors arising from these cells, all the cells of the tumor
will have the same CDR3 (because they all arose from
a single B or T cell clone), but in proliferations that are
reactions to external stimuli, many CDR3 sequences
will be present. The same principle can be used to define
the magnitude of an immune response—measuring
amount of proliferative expansion of a B or T cell clone.
Maturation and Selection of B Lymphocytes
The maturation of B lymphocytes occurs mainly in the
bone marrow (Fig. 4.14). Progenitors committed to the
B cell lineage proliferate, giving rise to a large number
of precursors of B cells, called pro-B cells. Subsequent
maturation involves antigen receptor gene expression
Early Steps in B Cell Maturation
The Ig heavy-chain locus rearranges first, and only
90 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
V(D)J combinations Ig: ~3x106 TCR: ~6x106
The numbers of gene segments refer to the average numbers of functional genes (which are known to be
MM, Bjorkman PJ: T-cell antigen receptor genes and T-cell recognition, Nature 334:395–402, 1988.)
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 91
random upstream Ig V gene segment is recombined to
the previously rearranged DJ unit in each pro-B cell.
Given that junctional nucleotides are randomly added
number of junctional nucleotides will not add up to a
multiple of three. Because three nucleotides code for
be made. The cells that successfully make functional
heavy-chain gene rearrangements and synthesize the
Ig heavy-chain µ protein are called pre-B cells. Pre-B
cells are therefore defined by the presence of the Ig µ
heavy-chain protein. As cells become pre-B cells, they
express the µ protein on the cell surface in association
with two other invariant proteins called surrogate light
and surrogate light chains associates with the Iga and
Igß signaling molecules to form the pre-B cell receptor
Role of the Pre-BCR Complex in B Cell Maturation
The assembled pre-BCR serves essential functions in
made a productive rearrangement at the Ig H chain
that express a functional µ heavy chain (which is
an essential component of the pre-BCR and BCR).
Pre-B cells that make out-of-frame (nonproductive)
rearrangements at the heavy-chain locus fail to make
the µ protein, cannot express a pre-BCR or receive
pre-BCR signals, and die by programmed cell death
(apoptosis). The pre-BCR signaling pathway includes
a downstream tyrosine kinase called Btk, which is
encoded on the X chromosome. Mutations in Btk
in boys results in the failure of pre-B cells to survive
and the subsequent absence of B cells. This disease is
called X-linked agammaglobulinemia.
from only one of the two inherited parental alleles.
HSC Pro-B Large Pre-B Immature B Mature B
Germline Germline Germline Rearranged
Fig. 4.14 Steps in the maturation and selection of B lymphocytes. The maturation of B lymphocytes
first Ig produced. BCR, B cell receptor; HSC, hematopoietic stem cell; mRNA, messenger RNA.
92 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
This process is called allelic exclusion, and it helps
ensure that each cell can only express a receptor of a
• Signals from the pre-BCR complex shut off expression
of the surrogate light-chain genes and open up the Ig
express the µ protein only in the cytoplasm (and not
on the cell surface) because they have no surrogate
light-chain proteins or regular light-chain proteins.
At this stage, these cells are called small pre-B cells.
protein and the assembly of cell surface IgM. The cells
rearranged ? chain locus fails to express a functional
process called receptor editing, described later.
express complete antigen receptors; this is the second
checkpoint during B cell maturation. Signals from the
loci. As a result, each B cell produces either one ? or
one ? light chain from one of the inherited parental
alleles. The presence of two sets of light-chain genes in
the genome simply increases the chance of completing
successful gene recombination and receptor expression.
Completion of B Cell Maturation
Further maturation occurs after the immature B cells leave
the primary RNA transcript, giving rise to µ or d mRNA,
respectively. We know that the ability of B cells to respond
to antigens develops together with the coexpression of
IgM and IgD, but why both classes of receptor are needed
is not known. The IgM+IgD+ cell is the mature B cell, able
to respond to antigen in peripheral lymphoid tissues.
Developing B cells are positively selected based mainly
on expression of complete antigen receptors and not on
later.) The B cell repertoire is further shaped by negative
selection. In this process, if an immature B cell binds
an antigen in the bone marrow with high affinity, it
may re-express the VDJ recombinase enzyme, undergo
additional light-chain V-J recombination, generate a
different light chain, and thus change the specificity of
the antigen receptor, a process called receptor editing
(see Chapter 9). Some B cells that encounter antigens
in the bone marrow may die by apoptosis, also known
as deletion. The antigens that developing B cells may
recognize in the bone marrow are mostly self antigens
that are abundantly expressed throughout the body (i.e.,
are ubiquitous), such as blood proteins, and membrane
The process of Ig gene recombination is random
and cannot be inherently biased toward recognition of
microbes. However, the receptors produced are able to
recognize the antigens of many, varied microbes that the
immune system must defend against. The repertoire of B
recognition of self antigens. What is left after these
selection processes is a large collection of mature B cells,
which by chance include cells that are able to recognize
almost any microbial antigen that may be encountered.
Most mature B cells are called follicular B cells because
they are found within lymph node and spleen follicles.
Marginal-zone B cells, which are found at the margins
of splenic follicles, develop from bone-marrow–derived
and the peritoneal cavity, develop earlier from fetal-liver–
derived hematopoietic stem cells. The role of these B cell
subsets in humoral immunity is described in Chapter 7.
Maturation and Selection of T Lymphocytes
T cell progenitors migrate from the bone marrow to
the thymus, where the entire process of maturation
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 93
Early Steps in T Cell Maturation
The least developed progenitors in the thymus are called
pro-T cells or double-negative T cells because they do
not express CD4 or CD8. These cells expand in number
recombinase, occurs in some of these double-negative
cells. (The ?d T cells undergo similar recombination
involving TCR ? and d loci, but they belong to a distinct
a TCR ß chain protein is synthesized, it is expressed on
the cell surface in association with an invariant protein
called pre-Ta, to form the pre-TCR complex of pre-T
cells. If the recombination in one of the two inherited
loci is not successful, recombination will take place on
the other locus. If that too fails and a complete TCR ß
chain is not produced in a pro-T cell, the cell dies.
The pre-TCR complex delivers intracellular signals
once it is assembled, similar to the signals from the
pre-BCR complex in developing B cells. These signals
ß chain locus (allelic exclusion). Failure to express the a
Fig. 4.15 Steps in the maturation and selection of major histocompatibility complex (MHC)–restricted
T lymphocytes. The maturation of T lymphocytes in the thymus proceeds through sequential steps often
same process eliminates self-reactive class I MHC–restricted CD8+ T cells.
94 CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System
chain and the complete TCR again results in death of the
cell. The surviving cells express the complete aß TCR
and both the CD4 and CD8 coreceptors; these cells are
called double-positive T cells.
low or moderate affinity, this T cell is selected to survive.
T cells that do not recognize an MHC molecule in the
thymus die by apoptosis; these T cells would not be useful
because they would be incapable of seeing MHC-displayed
process of positive selection. During this process, T cells
whose TCRs recognize class I MHC–peptide complexes
preserve the expression of CD8, the coreceptor that binds
T cell recognizes class II MHC–peptide complexes, this
cell maintains expression of CD4 and loses expression of
CD8. Thus, what emerges are single-positive T cells (or
single-positive thymocytes), which are either CD8+ class I
MHC restricted or CD4+ class II MHC restricted. During
positive selection, the T cells also become committed to
Immature, double-positive T cells whose receptors
selection, and it serves to eliminate T lymphocytes that
could react in a harmful way against self proteins that are
expressed in the thymus. If a T cell that recognizes a self
lead to harmful immune responses against self tissues,
so such a T cell must be eliminated. Some immature T
cells that recognize self antigens in the thymus do not
die but develop into regulatory T cells (see Chapter 9).
are typically captured and taken to secondary lymphoid
9 in the context of self-tolerance.
It may seem surprising that both positive selection
and negative selection are mediated by recognition of
the same set of self MHC–self peptide complexes in
the thymus. The two factors that determine the choice
between positive and negative selection are the affinity
of the TCR and the concentration of the self antigen in
the thymus. If a TCR strongly recognizes an abundant
self antigen in the thymus, that T cell will be negatively
selected, which makes sense because strong recognition
peptide–self MHC complex weakly, that T cell will be
positively selected because there is a reasonable chance
the T cell will recognize a foreign peptide presented by
self MHC strongly. This is the process that gives rise to
the repertoire of functional T cells.
• In the adaptive immune system, the molecules
responsible for specific recognition of antigens are
antibodies and T cell antigen receptors.
• Antibodies (also called immunoglobulins) may
be produced as membrane receptors of B lymphocytes and as proteins secreted by antigen-stimulated
molecules of humoral immunity, capable of neutralizing microbes and microbial toxins and eliminating
them by activating various effector mechanisms.
• T cell receptors (TCRs) are membrane receptors and
recognizes antigen, and a constant (C) region, which
provides structural stability and, in heavy chains,
performs the effector functions of antibodies. The
V region of one heavy chain and of one light chain
together form the antigen-binding site, and thus the
core structure has two identical antigen-binding sites.
• T cell receptors consist of an a chain and a ß chain.
Each chain contains one V region and one C region,
and both chains participate in the recognition of
CHAPTER 4 Antigen Recognition in the Adaptive Immune System 95
antigens, which for most T cells are peptides displayed by MHC molecules.
• The V regions of immunoglobulin (Ig) and TCR molecules contain hypervariable segments, also called
complementarity-determining regions (CDRs),
which are the regions of contact with antigens.
• The genes that encode antigen receptors consist of
multiple segments separated in the germline and
brought together during maturation of lymphocytes.
T cells, the TCR gene segments undergo recombination during maturation in the thymus.
• Receptors of different specificities are generated in
part by different combinations of V, D, and J gene
segments. The process of recombination introduces
variability in the nucleotide sequences at the sites of
recombination by adding or removing nucleotides
from the junctions. The result of this introduced
variability is the development of a diverse repertoire
• During their maturation, lymphocytes are selected to
expanded. In addition, T lymphocytes are positively
selected to recognize peptide antigens displayed
by self MHC molecules and to ensure that the recognition of the appropriate type of MHC molecule
matches the coreceptor preserved.
• Immature lymphocytes that strongly recognize self
antigens are negatively selected and prevented from
completing their maturation, thus eliminating cells
with the potential of reacting in harmful ways against
1. What are the functionally distinct domains (regions)
of antibody and TCR molecules? What features of the
amino acid sequences in these regions are important
2. What are the differences in the types of antigens recognized by antibodies and TCRs?
4. What are some of the checkpoints during lymphocyte maturation that ensure survival of the useful
5. What is the phenomenon of negative selection, and
Answers to and discussion of the Review Questions are
T lymphocytes perform multiple functions in defending
against infections by various kinds of microbes. A major
role for T lymphocytes is in cell-mediated immunity,
which provides defense against infections by microbes that
live and reproduce inside host cells. In all viral and some
bacterial, fungal, and protozoan infections, microbes may
• Many microbes are ingested by phagocytes as part
of the early defense mechanisms of innate immunity
and are killed by microbicidal mechanisms that are
largely limited to phagocytic vesicles (to protect the
cells themselves from damage by these mechanisms).
However, some of these microbes have evolved to
resist the microbicidal activities of phagocytes and
are able to survive, and even replicate, in the vesicles
of phagocytes. In such infections, T cells stimulate the
ability of macrophages to kill the ingested microbes.
• Some extracellular microbes, such as bacteria and
fungi, are readily destroyed if they are phagocytosed,
special types of leukocytes (eosinophils). In these
infections, T cells provide defense by recruiting the
leukocytes that destroy the microbes.
• Some microbes, notably viruses, are able to infect and
replicate inside a wide variety of cells, and parts of
the life cycles of the viruses take place in the cytosol
and nucleus. These infected cells often do not possess
intrinsic mechanisms for destroying the microbes,
especially outside vesicles. Even some phagocytosed
microbes within macrophages can escape into the
cytosol and evade the microbicidal mechanisms of
the vesicular compartment. T cells kill the infected
cells, thus eliminating the reservoir of infection.
Other populations of T cells help B cells to produce
antibodies as part of humoral immune responses (see
Chapter 7). Although our emphasis in this chapter is
on defense against infections, the principal physiologic
function of the immune system, some T cells, especially
Phases of T Cell Responses, 97
Antigen Recognition and Costimulation, 100
Recognition of Peptide-MHC Complexes, 100
Role of Adhesion Molecules in T Cell Responses, 102
Role of Costimulation in T Cell Activation, 103
Inhibitory Receptors of T Cells, 105
Stimuli for Activation of CD8+ T Cells, 105
Biochemical Pathways of T Cell Activation, 106
Functional Responses of T Lymphocytes to Antigen
Secretion of Cytokines and Expression of Cytokine
Differentiation of Naive T Cells into Effector Cells, 111
Development of Memory T Lymphocytes, 112
Cell-Mediated Immune Reactions, 113
Decline of the Immune Response, 116
CHAPTER 5 T Cell–Mediated Immunity 97
CD8+ T cells, also destroy cancerous cells. This role of T
cells is discussed in Chapter 10.
and help for B cells—require that the T lymphocytes
interact with other cells, which may be phagocytes,
infected host cells, or B lymphocytes. Furthermore, the
initiation of T cell responses requires that naive T cells
recognize antigens displayed by dendritic cells, which
capture antigens and concentrate them in lymphoid
organs. Thus, T lymphocytes work by communicating
with other cells. Recall that the specificity of T cells for
peptides displayed by major histocompatibility complex
(MHC) molecules ensures that the T cells can see and
respond only to antigens associated with other host cells
(see Chapters 3 and 4). This chapter discusses the way
in which T lymphocytes are activated by recognition of
cell-associated antigens and other stimuli. We address
• What signals are needed to activate T lymphocytes,
and what cellular receptors are used to sense and
• How are the few naive T cells specific for any microbe
converted into the large number of effector T cells
that have specialized functions and the ability to
• What molecules are produced by T lymphocytes that
mediate their communications with other cells, such
as macrophages, B lymphocytes, and other leukocytes?
After describing here how T cells recognize and
respond to the antigens of cell-associated microbes, in
Chapter 6, we discuss how these T cells function to eliminate the microbes.
proliferation of the T cells and their differentiation
into effector and memory cells, and the effector cells
perform their functions when they are activated by the
same antigens in any infected tissue (Fig. 5.2). Naive T
Intracellular microbes Examples
Nonphagocytic cell (e.g., epithelial cell)
Fig. 5.1 Types of intracellular microbes combated by T cell–mediated immunity. A, Microbes may be
and some protozoa are obligate intracellular parasites that reside in nonphagocytic cells.
Cells with intracellular microbes
phagocytes to destroy microbes, and CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) kill infected cells.
CHAPTER 5 T Cell–Mediated Immunity 99
cells are incapable of performing the effector functions
required for eliminating the microbes. Differentiated
effector cells are capable of performing these functions,
which they do at any site of infection. In this chapter,
their functions in cell-mediated immunity are described
in Chapter 6 and the roles of helper T cells in antibody
The responses of naive T lymphocytes to cellassociated microbial antigens consist of a series of
naive T cells to effector and memory cells (Fig. 5.3).
• One of the earliest responses is the secretion of
cytokines required for growth and differentiation
and increased expression of receptors for various
cytokines. The cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2), which
increase in the number of antigen-specific lymphocytes, a process called clonal expansion.
• The activated lymphocytes differentiate, resulting in
the conversion of naive T cells into a population of
effector T cells, which function to eliminate microbes.
• Many of the effector T cells leave the lymphoid
organs, enter the circulation, and migrate to any site
of infection, where they can eradicate the infection.
Some activated T cells may remain in the lymph
node, where they provide signals to B cells that promote antibody responses against the microbes.
• Some of the progeny of the T cells that have proliferated
in response to antigen develop into memory T cells,
which are long-lived, circulate or reside in tissues for
years, and are ready to respond rapidly to subsequent
• As effector T cells eliminate the infectious agent, the
in the greatly expanded clones of antigen-specific
effector lymphocytes die, returning the system to a
resting state, with only memory cells remaining from
This sequence of events is common to both CD4+
and CD8+ T lymphocytes, although there are important
differences in the properties and effector functions of
CD4+ and CD8+ cells, as discussed in Chapter 6.
Naive and effector T cells have different patterns of
circulation and migration through tissues, which are
critical for their different roles in immune responses.
Lymphoid organs Peripheral tissues
Cytokine Proliferation Differentiation
T lymphocyte; IL-2R, interleukin-2 receptor.
100 CHAPTER 5 T Cell–Mediated Immunity
As discussed in previous chapters, naive T lymphocytes
constantly recirculate through peripheral lymphoid
entry of the microbes to the same regions of peripheral
displayed by MHC molecules on dendritic cells, the
a T cell recognizes antigen, it is transiently arrested on
the dendritic cell and it initiates an activation program.
Activation results in proliferation and differentiation,
and then the cells may leave the lymphoid organ and
migration is discussed later in this chapter.
With this overview, we proceed to a description of
the stimuli required for T cell activation and regulation.
The initiation of T cell responses requires multiple
receptors on the T cells recognizing their specific
• The T cell receptor (TCR) recognizes MHC-associated
• CD4 or CD8 coreceptors on the T cells bind to MHC
molecules on the APC and work with the TCR complex to deliver activating signals.
• Adhesion molecules strengthen the binding of T cells
• Molecules called costimulators, which are expressed
on APCs after encounter with microbes, bind to
costimulatory receptors on the naive T cells, thus
promoting responses to infectious pathogens.
• Cytokines amplify the T cell response and direct it
along various differentiation pathways.
The roles of these molecules in T cell responses to
antigens are described next. Cytokines are discussed
Recognition of Peptide-MHC Complexes
The TCR for antigen and the CD4 or CD8 coreceptor
together recognize complexes of peptide antigens and
(Fig. 5.5). The TCRs expressed on all CD4+ and CD8+ T
cells consist of an a chain and a ß chain, both of which
participate in antigen recognition (see Fig. 4.7). (A small
subset of T cells expresses TCRs composed of ? and d
molecule located around the peptide-binding cleft. Every
No comments:
Post a Comment
اكتب تعليق حول الموضوع