Royal Society Open Science (Jan 2015)

The growth threshold conjecture: a theoretical framework for understanding T-cell tolerance

  • Clemente F. Arias,
  • Miguel A. Herrero,
  • José A. Cuesta,
  • Francisco J. Acosta,
  • Cristina Fernández-Arias

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.150016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 7

Abstract

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Adaptive immune responses depend on the capacity of T cells to target specific antigens. As similar antigens can be expressed by pathogens and host cells, the question naturally arises of how can T cells discriminate friends from foes. In this work, we suggest that T cells tolerate cells whose proliferation rates remain below a permitted threshold. Our proposal relies on well-established facts about T-cell dynamics during acute infections: T-cell populations are elastic (they expand and contract) and they display inertia (contraction is delayed relative to antigen removal). By modelling inertia and elasticity, we show that tolerance to slow-growing populations can emerge as a population-scale feature of T cells. This result suggests a theoretical framework to understand immune tolerance that goes beyond the self versus non-self dichotomy. It also accounts for currently unexplained observations, such as the paradoxical tolerance to slow-growing pathogens or the presence of self-reactive T cells in the organism.

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