## Abstract Suppression of the antibody response by supraoptimal numbers of T helper cells was studied __in vitro__ and found to have both a specific and a nonspecific component. Suppression did not depend on direct cell contract of T and B cells, as supernatants of activated T cells were just as i
Role of apoptosis in the regulation of virus-induced T cell responses, immune suppression, and memory
✍ Scribed by Raymond M. Welsh; Liisa K. Selin; Enal S. Razvi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Volume
- 59
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0730-2312
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Apoptosis is an important mechanism enabling the selection of the non‐self‐reactive T cell repertoire and for maintaining homeostasis in the immune system after it has expanded to combat infections. Highly activated, proliferating T cells become susceptible to apoptosis driven by a number of stimuli, and T cells activated during a viral infection become susceptible to “activation induced cell death” after repeated stimulation through the T cell receptor (TcR). This is a major mechanism for the immune deficiencies observed during many viral infections. During infections with a high antigen load this can lead to a selective deletion of virus‐specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and to the establishment of persistent infection. More commonly, the CTL control the infection first, and high levels of apoptosis in the expanded lymphocyte population occur after antigen and growth factors become limiting. This cell death does not seem to depend on TcR specificity, as the residual population contains a remarkably stable population of memory CTL precursors that approximate the frequency per CD8 cell of that seen during the peak of the acute infection. Subsequent infections with heterologous viruses result in an expansion and then an apoptotic elimination of T cells, with the consequence being a reduction in precursor CTL specific for the first virus. Thus, apoptosis shapes the quality and quantity of T cell memory. © 1995 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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