How do T cells, the beat cops of the immune system, detect signs of disease without the benefit of eyes? Like most cells, they explore their surroundings through direct physical contact, but how T cells feel out intruders rapidly and reliably enough to nip infections and other threats in the bud has remained a mystery to researchers.
In a new study, published online May 11, 2017, in Science, UC San Francisco researchers began to address this question by using
«Previous techniques had allowed us to take snapshots of the surface of T cells, but that’s like trying to understand a basketball game by studying a
Among other potential benefits, Krummel says, understanding how T cells efficiently sample their environment to search for invasive pathogens opens up new questions about what countermeasures infectious organisms or even cancer cells may have evolved as a way of avoiding detection, and could suggest new ways for researchers to help T cells see through such a ruse.
Efficient Search Key to Effective Immune Response
As they make their rounds through the body, T cells make contact with a network of informants — other immune cells that scour the body for potential signs of danger and display the protein fragments they find (called «antigens») on their surface for inspection by the T cells. If a T cell meets one of these
Scientists estimate that you have only about 100 T cells in your body at any given moment that can recognize and responding to a specific antigen, such a protein from this year’s flu virus, and these few cells each take days to patrol your entire body, Krummel said. «This means the immune system really needs to get ahead of whatever is attacking the body at the very first evidence that there’s an intruder on board. If one T cell misses the signs of a virus, the next time a cell that can recognize the threat might come through that tissue, the virus has had hours to make tens of thousands of copies of itself.»
New Imaging Reveal How Immune Cells ‘Talk’
In the Science study, Krummel’s team was able to study how T cells efficiently interrogate
Using this technology, the team studied mouse T cells exploring simulated patches of
The researchers calculated that, thanks to this efficient search pattern, in an average
To study the details of threat detection by microvilli, the authors devised a new approach that allowed them to simultaneously track microvilli as well as the T cell receptor (TCR) proteins T cells use to detect their target antigens. To do this, the team covered simulated patches of
They found that normally, individual microvilli poke and prod at the
«These videos give me a much more visceral understanding of what’s happening when T cells and
Technology Opens Opportunities to Study Immunity and Disease
Krummel’s team also briefly studied the surfaces of other types of immune cells, such as dendritic cells and B cells, which play different roles in pathogen detection and immune response. They found that each cell type appears to use distinct patterns of surface protrusions — such as tentacles, waves, or
«Understanding how the immune system reliably detects and responds to the huge range of potential threats it has to deal with is one of the key questions we still face as immunologists," Krummel said. «Of course, the immune system also makes mistakes — like when it attacks the body’s own cells in autoimmune disease or fails to recognize cancerous cells as a threat. Understanding the mechanics and constraints of how the immune system recognizes threats in the first place could potentially help us correct those errors.»
En Cai, PhD, Kyle Marchuk, PhD, Peter Beemiller, PhD, and Casey Beppler, BS, of UCSF, were
Funding for this research was provided by the National Institutes of Health (AI052116), National Cancer Institute (U01CA202241), a US Department of Defense National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship, and a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (1650113). Betzig is an inventor on patent application US 20130286181 A1, submitted by Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), which covers LLS imaging. The authors declare no competing financial interests.
UC San Francisco (UCSF) is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research,
Source: http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2017/05/406956/video-imaging-reveals-how-immune-cells-sense-danger