Publication | Open Access
Modes of cell:cell communication in the immune system
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1985
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Adaptive Immune SystemImmunologyImmunodominanceAntigen ProcessingT CellsImmune SystemImmunotherapyCell InteractionImmune MediatorNeuroimmunologyCell SignalingT CellImmunological MemoryAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityCell BiologyCell CommunicationMedicine
Different cell types in the immune system appear to mediate their effects by markedly different means. B lymphocytes couple information for specificity with information for function in a single long-range molecule, antibody. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted T cells, which we have analyzed in detail, appear to recognize antigen only on the surface of cells bearing the appropriate MHC gene product. This interaction provokes the T cell to release short-range, non-antigen-specific mediators (lymphokines) that preferentially act on the target cell bearing the antigen and stimulating the T cell. Regulatory T cells appear to make antigen-specific long-range molecules that, like antibody, combine specificity with information for function. However, unlike antibody molecules, these regulatory T cell products display recognition for particular target cells in the form of genetic restrictions. These behaviors are compared to strategies of cell:cell communication in the nervous system.