Mechanisms of T cell development and transformation

U Koch, F Radtke - Annual review of cell and developmental …, 2011 - annualreviews.org
U Koch, F Radtke
Annual review of cell and developmental biology, 2011annualreviews.org
T cells are the key mediators in cell-mediated immunity. Their development and maturation
involve a complex variety of interactions with nonlymphoid cell products and receptors.
Highly specialized to defend against bacterial and viral infections, T cells also mediate
immune surveillance against tumor cells and react to foreign tissues. T cell progenitors
originate in the bone marrow and, through a series of defined and coordinated
developmental stages, enter the thymus, differentiate, undergo selection, and eventually …
T cells are the key mediators in cell-mediated immunity. Their development and maturation involve a complex variety of interactions with nonlymphoid cell products and receptors. Highly specialized to defend against bacterial and viral infections, T cells also mediate immune surveillance against tumor cells and react to foreign tissues. T cell progenitors originate in the bone marrow and, through a series of defined and coordinated developmental stages, enter the thymus, differentiate, undergo selection, and eventually mature into functional T cells. The steps in this process are regulated through a complex transcriptional network, specific receptor-ligand pair interactions, and sensitization to trophic factors, which mediate the homing, proliferation, survival, and differentiation of developing T cells. This review examines the processes and pathways involved in the highly orchestrated development of T cell fate specification under physiological as well as pathological conditions.
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