AI Article Synopsis

  • T cell antigen receptor zeta chain down-regulation and decreased T cell function occur in cancer and autoimmune/infectious diseases, but the reasons for this are not fully understood.
  • Sustained exposure to antigens and chronic inflammation may trigger these changes.
  • Experiments on mice show that prolonged exposure to bacterial antigens can lead to zeta chain down-regulation and impaired T cell function, suggesting this response may help prevent harmful excessive immune reactions, but also potentially weaken responses against chronic diseases.

Article Abstract

T cell antigen receptor zeta chain down-regulation and impaired in vitro T cell function have been described in cancer and autoimmune and infectious diseases. However, the immunological basis for this phenomenon is unknown. Sustained exposure to antigen and chronic systemic inflammation, factors shared by the various pathologies, might account for this phenomenon. We developed an in vivo experimental system that mimics these conditions and show that sustained exposure of mice to bacterial antigens was sufficient to induce T cell antigen receptor zeta chain down-regulation and impair T cell function, provided an interferon-gamma-dependent T helper type 1 immune response developed. This indicates zeta chain down-regulation could be a physiological response that attenuates an exacerbated immune response. However, it can act as a 'double-edged sword', impairing immune responses to chronic diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ni975DOI Listing

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