The growth threshold conjecture: a theoretical framework for understanding T-cell tolerance

Author:

Arias Clemente F.12,Herrero Miguel A.1,Cuesta José A.345,Acosta Francisco J.2,Fernández-Arias Cristina6

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Matemática Aplicada, and, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

2. Departamento de Ecología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

3. Grupo Interdisciplinar de Sistemas Complejos, Madrid, Spain

4. Departamento de Matemáticas, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Leganés, Madrid, Spain

5. Instituto de Biocomputación y Física de Sistemas Complejos (BIFI), Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain

6. Department of Microbiology, Division of Parasitology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Adaptive immune responses depend on the capacity of T cells to target specific antigens. As similar antigens can be expressed by pathogens and host cells, the question naturally arises of how can T cells discriminate friends from foes. In this work, we suggest that T cells tolerate cells whose proliferation rates remain below a permitted threshold. Our proposal relies on well-established facts about T-cell dynamics during acute infections: T-cell populations are elastic (they expand and contract) and they display inertia (contraction is delayed relative to antigen removal). By modelling inertia and elasticity, we show that tolerance to slow-growing populations can emerge as a population-scale feature of T cells. This result suggests a theoretical framework to understand immune tolerance that goes beyond the self versus non-self dichotomy. It also accounts for currently unexplained observations, such as the paradoxical tolerance to slow-growing pathogens or the presence of self-reactive T cells in the organism.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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