3 research outputs found
Chemotactic migration of T cells towards dendritic cells promotes the detection of rare antigens
In many immunological processes chemoattraction is thought to play a role in guiding cells to their sites of action. However,
based on in vivo two-photon microscopy experiments in the absence of cognate antigen, T cell migration in lymph nodes
(LNs) has been roughly described as a random walk. Although it has been shown that dendritic cells (DCs) carrying cognate
antigen in some circumstances attract T cells chemotactically, it is currently still unclear whether chemoattraction of T cells
towards DCs helps or hampers scanning. Chemoattraction towards DCs could on the one hand help T cells to rapidly find
DCs. On the other hand, it could be deleterious if DCs become shielded by a multitude of attracted yet non-specific T cells.
Results from a recent simulation study suggested that the deleterious effect dominates. We re-addressed the question
whether T cell chemoattraction towards DCs is expected to promote or hamper the detection of rare antigens using the
Cellular Potts Model, a formalism that allows for dynamic, flexible cellular shapes and cell migration. Our simulations show
that chemoattraction of T cells enhances the DC scanning efficiency, leading to an increased probability that rare antigenspecific
T cells find DCs carrying cognate antigen. Desensitization of T cells after contact with a DC further improves the
scanning efficiency, yielding an almost threefold enhancement compared to random migration. Moreover, the chemotaxisdriven
migration still roughly appears as a random walk, hence fine-tuned analysis of cell tracks will be required to detect
chemotaxis within microscopy data.Toxicolog
Oscillations and waves of cyclic AMP in Dictyostelium: a prototype for spatio-temporal organization and pulsatile intercellular communication.
The amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum aggregate after starvation in a wavelike manner in response to periodic pulses of cyclic AMP (cAMP) secreted by cells which behave as aggregation centers. In addition to autonomous oscillations, the cAMP signaling system that controls aggregation is also capable of excitable behavior, which consists in the transient amplification of suprathreshold pulses of extracellular cAMP. Since the first theoretical model for slime mold aggregation proposed by Keller and Segel in 1970, many theoretical studies have addressed various aspects of the mechanism and function of cAMP signaling in Dictyostelium. This paper presents a brief overview of these developments as well as some reminiscences of the author's collaboration with Lee Segel in modeling the dynamics of cAMP relay and oscillations. Considered in turn are models for cAMP signaling in Dictyostelium, the developmental path followed by the cAMP signaling system after starvation, the frequency encoding of cAMP signals, and the origin of concentric or spiral waves of cAMP.Historical ArticleJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tSCOPUS: re.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe