Following
development in the
thymus, these cells (termed recent thymic emigrants (RTE)) egress from the thymus and home to
secondary lymphoid organs (SLO;
spleen and
lymph nodes). Of note, only a very small minority of T cells egresses from the thymus (estimates commonly range from 1–5% but some experts feel even this is generous). Maturation of RTE in SLO results in the generation of mature
naive T cells (naïve meaning they have never been exposed to the
antigen that they are programmed to respond to), but naive T cells now lack or have
downregulated (reduced) expression of the RTE-related surface markers, such as
CD31,
PTK7, Complement Receptor 1 and 2 (
CR1,
CR2) and the production of
interleukin 8 (IL-8). Like all T cells, they express the
T cell receptor-
CD3 complex. The T cell receptor (TCR) consists of both constant and variable regions. The variable region determines what antigen the T cell can respond to. CD4+ T cells have TCRs with an affinity for
Class II MHC, and CD4 is involved in determining MHC affinity during maturation in the
thymus. Class II MHC proteins are generally only found on the surface of professional
antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Professional antigen-presenting cells are primarily
dendritic cells,
macrophages and
B cells, although dendritic cells are the only cell group that expresses MHC Class II
constitutively (at all times). Some APCs also bind native (or unprocessed) antigens to their surface, such as
follicular dendritic cells (these are
not the same type of cells as the
dendritic cells of the immune system but rather have a non-hematopoietic origin, and in general lack MHC Class II, meaning they are not true professional antigen-presenting cells; however, follicular dendritic cells may acquire MHC Class II proteins via exosomes that become attached to them). T cells require
antigens to be processed into short fragments which form
linear epitopes on MHC Class II (in the case of helper T cells because they express CD4) or MHC class I (in the case of
cytotoxic T cells which express
CD8). MHC Class II binding pockets are flexible with respect to the length of the peptides they hold. Generally, there are 9 core amino acid residues with several flanking amino acids which form a length of about 12–16 amino acids total but have been known to hold as many as 25 amino acids. By comparison, MHC Class I proteins are usually 9-10 peptides long. The activation of naive T cells is commonly explained in terms of the 3-signal model, elaborated upon below.
Activation (signal 1) and "helper" CD4+ cells respectively .During an immune response,
professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs)
endocytose antigens (typically bacteria or viruses), which undergo
processing, then travel from the infection site to the
lymph nodes. Typically, the APC responsible is a dendritic cell. If the antigen expresses appropriate molecular patterns (sometimes known as signal 0), it can induce maturation of the dendritic cell which results in enhanced expression of costimulatory molecules needed to activate T cells (see signal 2) and MHC Class II. Once at the lymph nodes, the APCs begin to present antigen peptides that are bound to Class II MHC, allowing CD4+ T cells that express the specific TCRs against the peptide/MHC complex to activate. When a Th cell encounters and recognizes the antigen on an APC, the
TCR-
CD3 complex binds strongly to the peptide-MHC complex present on the surface of professional APCs.
CD4, a co-receptor of the TCR complex, also binds to a different section of the MHC molecule. It is estimated that approximately 50 of these interactions are required for the activation of a helper T cell and assemblies known as microclusters have been observed forming between the TCR-CD3-CD4 complexes of the T cell and the MHC Class II proteins of the dendritic cell at the zone of contact. When these all come together, the CD4 is able to recruit a kinase called
Lck which phosphorylates
immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMs) present on the CD3 gamma, delta, epsilon, and zeta chains. The protein
ZAP-70 can bind these phosphorylated ITAMs via its
SH2 domain and then itself becomes phosphorylated, wherein it orchestrates the downstream signaling required for T cell activation. Lck activation is controlled by the opposing actions of
CD45 and
Csk. CD45 activates Lck by dephosphorylating a tyrosine in its C-terminal tail, while Csk phosphorylates Lck at that site. The loss of CD45 produces a form of SCID because failure to activate Lck prevents appropriate T cell signaling. Memory T cells also make use of this pathway and have higher levels of Lck expressed and the function of Csk is inhibited in these cells. The binding of the antigen-MHC to the TCR complex and CD4 may also help the APC and the Th cell adhere during Th cell activation, but the integrin protein
LFA-1 on the T cell and
ICAM on the APC are the primary molecules of adhesion in this cell interaction. It is unknown what role the relatively bulky extracellular region of CD45 plays during cell interactions, but CD45 has various isoforms that change in size depending on the Th cell's activation and maturation status. For example, CD45 shortens in length following Th activation (CD45RA+ to CD45RO+), but whether this change in length influences activation is unknown. It has been proposed that the larger CD45RA may decrease the accessibility of the T cell receptor for the antigen-MHC molecule, thereby necessitating an increase in the affinity (and specificity) of the T cell for activation. However, once the activation has occurred, CD45 shortens, allowing easier interactions and activation as an effector T helper cell.
Survival (signal 2) Having received the first TCR/CD3 signal, the naïve T cell must activate a second independent biochemical pathway, known as Signal 2. This verification step is a protective measure to ensure that a T cell is responding to a foreign antigen. If this second signal is not present during initial antigen exposure, the T cell presumes that it is auto-reactive. This results in the cell becoming
anergic (anergy is generated from the unprotected biochemical changes of Signal 1). Anergic cells will not respond to any antigen in the future, even if both signals are present later on. These cells are generally believed to circulate throughout the body with no value until they undergo
apoptosis. The second signal involves an interaction between
CD28 on the CD4+ T cell and the proteins
CD80 (B7.1) or
CD86 (B7.2) on the professional APCs. Both CD80 and CD86 activate the CD28 receptor. These proteins are also known as
co-stimulatory molecules. Although the verification stage is necessary for the activation of naïve helper T cells, the importance of this stage is best demonstrated during the similar activation mechanism of CD8+
cytotoxic T cells. As naïve CD8+ T cells have no true bias towards foreign sources, these T cells must rely on the activation of CD28 for confirmation that they recognize a foreign antigen (as CD80/CD86 is only expressed by active APC's). CD28 plays an important role in decreasing the risk of T cell auto-immunity against host antigens. Once the naïve T cell has both pathways activated, the biochemical changes induced by Signal 1 are altered, allowing the cell to activate instead of undergoing anergy. The second signal is then obsolete; only the first signal is necessary for future activation. This is also true for memory T cells, which is one example of
learned immunity. Faster responses occur upon reinfection because memory T cells have already undergone confirmation and can produce effector cells much sooner.
Differentiation (signal 3) Once the two-signal activation is complete the T helper cell (Th) then allows itself to
proliferate. It achieves this by releasing a potent T cell growth factor called
interleukin 2 (IL-2) which acts upon itself in an
autocrine fashion. Activated T cells also produce the alpha sub-unit of the
IL-2 receptor (
CD25 or IL-2R), enabling a fully functional receptor that can bind with IL-2, which in turn activates the T cell's proliferation pathways. The
autocrine or
paracrine secretion of IL-2 can bind to that same Th cell or neighboring Th's via the IL-2R thus driving proliferation and clonal expansion. The Th cells receiving both signals of activation and proliferation will then become Th0 (T helper 0) cells that secrete IL-2,
IL-4 and
interferon gamma (IFN-γ). The Th0 cells will then differentiate into Th1 or Th2 cells depending on
cytokine environment. IFN-γ drives Th1 cell production while
IL-10 and IL-4 inhibit Th1 cell production. Conversely, IL-4 drives Th2 cell production and IFN-γ inhibits Th2 cells. These cytokines are
pleiotropic and carry out many other functions of the immune response. == Effector function ==