Treg和自我反应T细胞的谱系:老朋友HTLV-1的单细胞视角。

Discovery immunology Pub Date : 2024-05-13 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1093/discim/kyae006
Masahiro Ono, Yorifumi Satou
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摘要

尽管对调节性 T 细胞(Treg)进行了广泛的研究,但有关体内动态的基本问题仍有待解答。本研究旨在剖析 Treg 生物学中几个相互交织的概念,强调 Treg 及其对应物(即自然产生的记忆表型 T 细胞)的 "自我反应性 "是人类逆转录病毒感染可利用的关键机制。我们提出了新的关键概念--周期性 T 细胞受体(TCR)信号 T 细胞,利用 Nr4a3-细胞动力学与活性定时器(Tocky)技术以可量化的方式捕捉自我反应。自我反应 T 细胞中周期性的短暂 TCR 信号与炎症期间的急性 TCR 信号形成鲜明对比。因此,我们提出了两种 TCR 信号或抗原识别激活 T 细胞的新双轴模型,阐明了 Foxp3 表达和急性 TCR 信号如何积极调控周期性 TCR 信号 T 细胞。接下来,我们重点介绍了在 Treg 研究之前,关于人 T 细胞白血病病毒 1 型(HTLV-1)的免疫学研究中一个未被重视的分支,阐明了病毒感染、CD25 和 Foxp3 之间缺失的联系。基于单细胞分析的证据,我们展示了病毒感染如何利用 T 细胞活化的调控机制,并提出了周期性 TCR 信号在感染和恶性转化中的潜在作用。总之,本研究中的新观点和模型为研究自我反应 T 细胞谱系中的 Treg 提供了一个工作框架,有望促进对 HTLV-1 感染、癌症和针对这些疾病的免疫疗法策略的理解。
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Spectrum of Treg and self-reactive T cells: single cell perspectives from old friend HTLV-1.

Despite extensive regulatory T cell (Treg) research, fundamental questions on in vivo dynamics remain to be answered. The current study aims to dissect several interwoven concepts in Treg biology, highlighting the 'self-reactivity' of Treg and their counterparts, namely naturally-arising memory-phenotype T-cells, as a key mechanism to be exploited by a human retroviral infection. We propose the novel key concept, Periodic T cell receptor (TCR)-signalled T-cells, capturing self-reactivity in a quantifiable manner using the Nr4a3-Timer-of-cell-kinetics-and-activity (Tocky) technology. Periodic and brief TCR signals in self-reactive T-cells contrast with acute TCR signals during inflammation. Thus, we propose a new two-axis model for T-cell activation by the two types of TCR signals or antigen recognition, elucidating how Foxp3 expression and acute TCR signals actively regulate Periodic TCR-signalled T-cells. Next, we highlight an underappreciated branch of immunological research on Human T-cell Leukemia Virus type 1 (HTLV-1) that precedes Treg studies, illuminating the missing link between the viral infection, CD25, and Foxp3. Based on evidence by single-cell analysis, we show how the viral infection exploits the regulatory mechanisms for T-cell activation and suggests a potential role of periodic TCR signalling in infection and malignant transformation. In conclusion, the new perspectives and models in this study provide a working framework for investigating Treg within the self-reactive T-cell spectrum, expected to advance understanding of HTLV-1 infection, cancer, and immunotherapy strategies for these conditions.

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