T cells

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T-cells or T-lymphocytes are a group of lymphocytes involved in specific immune response, specifically antigen-specific cellular interactions. There are two main subsets; Cytotoxic T-cells and Helper T-cells, Helper T-cells are further divided into inflammatory (TH1) and (TH2) Helper cells which assist B-cells by forming antibodies. T-cells are formed from bone marrow stem cells that undergo maturation in the Thymus[1].

Individual T cells are able to recognise only certain antigens, discriminating between antigens using protein molecules on the cell surface called receptors. The receptor and the antigen fit together like a lock and a key only when their shapes match perfectly. The number and specificity of T cell receptors appear to be determined by the cell’s genes[2].

Before T cells have encountered an antigen, they are known as naive T cells and they have a low affinity for Interleukin-2 (IL-2). Once they recognise an antigen they become activated and once activated they have a high affinity for IL-2 which leads to lots of IL-2 binding which causes a proliferation of T cells (binding of IL-2 causes T cells to begin the cell cycle)[3].

Activation of T cells by antigen recognition also causes them to differentiate into 3 different types of T cells. CD8 T cells differentiate into Cytotoxic T cells and CD4 T Cells differentiate into CD4 TH1 and CD4 TH2 cells[4].

CD4+ T cells recognise peptides bound to MHC class II complexes bound on the cell surface, whereas CD8+ T cells recognise peptides bound to MHC class I complexes bound to the cell surface.

Referneces

  1. Michael Madigan, John Martinko, David Stahl, David Clark. (2012) Brock Biology of Microorganisms, Thirteenth Edition, San Francisco: Pearson. 246-249
  2. http://www.nationalmssociety.org/What-is-MS/Definition-of-MS/T-cells
  3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2267244/
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK10762/