Title: The Development of T Lymphocytes
1(No Transcript)
2Chapter 5
- Understand how the thymus is the site of
development for T cells - How do cells commit to a lineage during T cell
development - How do we eliminate self-reactive T cells without
eliminating the ability to recognize self-MHC
3The Development of T Lymphocytes
Two types of TCR 1. aß T cells CD4
CD8 2. ?d T cells
4T cells develop in the thymus
T cells (T-lymphocytes) thymus-dependent
lymphocytes
The thymus is a primary lymphoid organ because it
is only involved in development, not fighting
infection.
The thymus contains
a) Thymocytes (immature T cells) b) Thymic stroma
(epithelial cells)
5The Thymus
2 areas of the thymus
Cortex outer, close-packed consists of
ectodermal cells can contain thymocytes and
macrophages
Medulla inner, less dense consists of
endodermal cells contains thymocytes, dendritic
cells, and macrophages
Thymic anlage The combination of the
ectodermal and endodermal cells, colonized by
progenitor cells from the bone marrow.
6Thymus facts
- Fully developed at birth and increases in size
until puberty - Most active in the young
- Degrades after puberty (involution), being
replaced with fat tissue - Even after involution (30 yrs. old) or a
thymectomy immunity by T cells is not impaired
significantly - Mature T cell repertoire is long-lived and
self-renewing
7T cell markers
T Cell receptor aß or ?d chains bind peptide
antigens
CD3 complexes of CD3?e, CD3de, and 2 ? chains
for signaling to the interior of the cell
CD4 or CD8 receptors that bind MHC molecules
Progenitor cells entering the thymus have NO TCR,
CD3, or CD4/CD8 surface receptors immature
thymocytes called double-negative thymocytes
After ß chain rearrangement, T cells express both
CD4 and CD8 surface receptors immature
thymocytes called double-positive thymocytes
Mature T cells express either CD4 or CD8 surface
receptors thymocytes called single-positive
thymocytes
8TCR gene rearrangement
Order of TCR gene rearrangements controls the
distribution of T cell lineages 95 aß T
cells 5 ?d T cells
9T cell lineages
Pre T cell ? (pT?) - a place-holder
10aß TCR rearrangement
- ß chain
- rearranges first
- has variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J)
gene segments - Can attempt gene rearrangements on both
chromosomes or by a second rearrangement on the
same chromosome - Tandem DJ and V segments
- 80 of T cells make successful rearrangements
- Successful rearrangement leads to expression of
CD4 and CD8 - a chain
- rearranges second
- has several variable (V) and joining (J) gene
segments - Can undergo several gene rearrangements
- Both a chain loci can rearrange leading to the
potential for 2 different a chains and 2
different TCRs on a single cell
11Gene rearrangement . . . In pictures
12ß chain rearrangement
13a chain rearrangement
14?d T cells
- Express rearranged TCRs, generate immunologic
memory and induce dendritic cell maturation - Effector functions similar to ?? T cells making
them part of the Adaptive immune system - HOWEVER, they have limitied TCR gene usage, TCRs
act as pattern recognition receptors, and respond
fast - Might be a conserved, primitive form of immunity
that bridges INNATE with ADAPTIVE
15Proposed scheme to use ?? T cells for
immunotherapy
16T cell generation in mice
The first ?d T cells express receptors based on
the first V segment nearest the D segments
(epidermis- yellow). Later the majority of ?d T
cells express receptors with the other V segment
(reproductive tract - red). After birth the aß T
cells dominate.
17Positive and Negative Selection of T Cells
Where cortex, cortico-medullary junction
(thymus) Who double positive, ab T cells What
is being selected the TCR
- Purpose
- Positive Selection Select TCRs that recognize
self MHCs - -In periphery, T cells recognize foreign
peptide that is presented by self MHCs - -T cells must recognize (bind to) self MHCs to
be activated by - foreign peptide
- Negative Selection Eliminate TCRs that recognize
self - -T cells recognizing self MHC containing self
peptides are - potentially autoreactive
18Positive Selection (PS)
- TCR physically binds to MHC on APC
- Select T cells that can recognize self MHCs
- Primary thymic repertoire has bias toward
general MHCs - -select those TCR that recognize inherited self
MHCs - (6 MHC I and minimally 6 MHC II)
- Only 2 of a given thymic repertoire can
recognize self - MHCs PS process of stimulation those T
cell to mature
POINT Thymic T cells undergoing positive
selection are pre-programmed to die unless they
receive a signal to live and mature (98 DIE)
- How are thymocytes (T cells in the thymus)
positively selected? - thymic cortical epithelial cells express MHC I
and MHC II on their surface - MHC molecules not stable in absence of peptide
all contain self peptides - ab chains of TCR test all MHC complexes for
ones they recognize (bind to) - -if bound with 3-4 days signal to live if
not, DIE by default - -120,000 self peptides presented by 12
different MHC molecules most involved - in positive selection
19Bone Marrow Transplant Share HLA Allotypes
- Bone marrow transplant destroy
- recipient bone marrow cells including
- hematopoietic stem cells
- Reconstitute all blood cells including
- lymphocytes with donor cells
- T cells selected on self (recipient)
- MHC (thymus)
- APCs developing in bone marrow are
- donor
- Recipient T cells can not recognize
- donor APCs, unless donor and
-
- recipient have some common (share) HLA (MHC)
molecules - Minimum share one common MCH I molecule and one
common MHC II molecule
20Transition from Double Positive to Single Positive
- Choice of whether to become a CD4 T cell
- or CD8 T cell is determined during
- positive selection
- Single positive T cells express either CD4
- or CD8, but NOT both
- Developing T cell interacts with MHC I on
- thymic stromal epithelial cells CD8
- Developing T cell interacts with MHC II on
- thymic epithelial cells CD4
- Bare lymphocyte syndromes
- -patients lacking MHC I have only CD4
- cells
- -patients lacking MHC II have only CD8
- cells
21a Chain Gene Rearrangement During Positive
Selection
- a chains of the TCR can continue to rearrange to
enhance chances of passing - positive selection (reminiscent of light chain
rearrangement BCR)
- Permits development of
- single T cell with two
- different a chains
- Probability of both chains
- passing positive selection
- is extremely remote
- Result only one functional
- TCR per T cell
22Negative Selection
- Select cells for elimination that express
- TCRs that strongly recognize self MHC
- presenting self peptides
Where cortico-medullary junction Who is
selecting macrophages and dendritic cells How
strong binding of the TCR sends signal to DIE
(apoptosis)
Two individuals of completely different
haplotypes have non-overlapping T cell
repertoires the T cell repertoire is highly
personalized.
23Mature, Naïve T Cells Meet Ag in Secondary
Lymphoid Tissue
- Only 1-2 of immature T cells survive selection
in the thymus - Surviving cells leave, enter the periphery and
circulate through secondary - lymphoid tissue
- Naïve T cells are long lived and can circulate
for years in the absence of - Ag (antigen)
- Meet Ag in the T cell area of the secondary
lymphoid tissue
Ag stimulates naïve T cells
Effector T cells
CD8 Cytotoxic T cells
CD4 Helper T cells
CD4 Helper T cells
TH1
TH2
Thymus Leave
Leave Stay
- Twice as many CD4 T cells in the circulation
than CD8 T cells
24Alloreactive T Cells
- 5-10 of T cell repertoire reacts strongly to
allogenic - cells (non-self MHC)
- Allograft rejection (kidney)
- T cell repertoire biased to recognize MHC
molecules in - general
- Elimination of those T cells that recognize self
MHCs - (negative selection) leaves an increased
proportion of - T cells recognizing non-self MHC (allogenic)
2512 Different MHC Isotypes is Optimal
- Double MHC isotype number double those passing
- positive selection
- Double number of isotype number geometrically
- increase those deleted by negative selection
- Too many MHC isotypes will significantly limit
the T - cell repertoire
- 12 isotypes appear optimal
Note Skip Fig. 5.15
26Development of T Cell Tumors
T cell tumors represent different stages of T
cell development (like B cell tumors)
27T Cell Development in the Thymus
28Stages of ab T Cell Development