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Wake Forest Physics
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WFU Physics Colloquium
TITLE:
Stochastic modelling of T cell receptor diversity maintenance
SPEAKER:
Dr. Carmen Molina-Paris
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TIME: Thursday Mar. 26, 2009 at 4:00 PM
PLACE: Room 101 in Olin Physical Laboratory
ABSTRACT
T cells are specialized white blood cells that protect the body from
infection and are also able to kill infected cells. T cells are
characterized by the presence of a special receptor on their cell
surface called T cell receptor (TCR). The specificity of the T cell,
namely which pathogens it can recognize, is determined by the molecular
structure of its TCR. T cells can be classified according to their
TCRs. All T cells that have identical TCRs are said to belong to the
same clonotype. There are two types of T cells: naive and memory. Naive
T cells have not yet encountered pathogens and memory T cells have
already encountered pathogen. In this talk, I will only consider the
class of naive T cells. A diverse naive T cell pool is essential to
protect against novel infections, as the immune system cannot predict
which pathogens the organism will be exposed to during its life-time. A
healthy adult human possesses approximately 1011 naive T cells,
which belong to about 107 - 108 different clonotypes. The reliability of
the immune response to pathogenic challenge depends critically on the
size (how many cells) and diversity (how many different TCRs or
clonotypes) of the naive T cell pool of the individual. Experimental
evidence suggests that interactions between TCRs with self-peptides
(self-peptide = a fragment of a household protein) displayed on the
surface of specialized cells, called antigen presenting cells (APCs),
are important in controlling naive T cell numbers. Naive T cells
undergo one round of cell division after receiving a survival stimulus
from these specialized APCs. Whether or not a particular naive T cell
can receive a survival signal from an specialized APC depends both on
the TCR it expresses and the array of self-peptides displayed on the
surface of the APC. Competition amongst naive T cells for these
interactions regulates the diversity of the naive T cell pool. |