T cell Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
T‑cell receptor (TCR) – membrane protein (α + β chains) that recognizes peptide‑MHC complexes; generated by random V‑D‑J recombination.
Positive selection – thymocytes that weakly bind self‑MHC receive survival signals → become CD4⁺ (MHC II) or CD8⁺ (MHC I) T cells.
Negative selection – thymocytes that bind self‑antigen too strongly are deleted (central tolerance) or become regulatory T cells (Tregs).
Two‑signal activation –
Signal 1: TCR + peptide‑MHC.
Signal 2: CD28 + B7 (CD80/86).
Lack of Signal 2 → anergy.
T‑cell exhaustion – progressive loss of effector function after chronic antigen exposure; marked by high PD‑1, TIM‑3, LAG‑3, CTLA‑4.
Checkpoint blockade – therapeutic antibodies that block inhibitory receptors, restoring T‑cell activity.
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📌 Must Remember
CD4⁺ vs CD8⁺: CD4⁺ → MHC II → helper functions; CD8⁺ → MHC I → cytotoxic killing.
Selection checkpoints:
β‑selection (DN3): successful TCR‑β + pre‑Tα → stop further β rearrangement.
Positive selection → CD4⁺ or CD8⁺ lineage.
Negative selection → apoptosis or Treg diversion.
Key activation markers: CD69 (early), CD25 (IL‑2Rα), CD71 (transferrin receptor).
Exhaustion signature: ↑ PD‑1, TIM‑3, LAG‑3, CTLA‑4; ↓ IL‑2, TNF‑α, IFN‑γ.
Checkpoint inhibitors: anti‑PD‑1 (pembrolizumab, nivolumab), anti‑CTLA‑4 (ipilimumab).
Memory subsets:
Central memory (CCR7⁺, CD62L⁺).
Effector memory (CCR7⁻, CD62L⁻).
Tissue‑resident (CD103⁺).
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🔄 Key Processes
Thymic Development
HSC → multipotent progenitor → common lymphoid progenitor (CLP) → migrate to thymus → thymocyte.
DN (CD4⁻CD8⁻) → β‑selection (RAG‑mediated V‑D‑J recombination).
DP (CD4⁺CD8⁺) → positive selection (MHC binding) → single‑positive CD4⁺ or CD8⁺.
Negative selection in medulla (mTECs presenting tissue‑specific antigens).
T‑cell Activation (CD4⁺)
Signal 1: TCR‑pMHC II binding.
Signal 2: CD28‑B7 interaction → PI3K → PIP₃.
ITAM phosphorylation → ZAP‑70 → LAT scaffold → PLC‑γ activation.
PLC‑γ hydrolyzes PIP₂ → DAG + IP₃ → Ca²⁺ release → calcineurin → NFAT dephosphorylation.
NFAT + NF‑κB + AP‑1 → transcription of IL‑2 and other genes.
Exhaustion Induction
Persistent TCR signaling + inadequate co‑stimulation → up‑regulation of inhibitory receptors + IL‑10/TGF‑β signaling → functional decline.
Checkpoint Blockade Therapy
Antibody binds inhibitory receptor (e.g., PD‑1) → prevents ligand interaction → restores NFAT/NF‑κB signaling → cytokine production resumes.
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🔍 Key Comparisons
CD4⁺ helper vs CD8⁺ cytotoxic
MHC restriction: CD4⁺ → MHC II; CD8⁺ → MHC I.
Primary role: CD4⁺ → activate B cells, macrophages, other T cells; CD8⁺ → directly kill infected/tumor cells.
Positive vs Negative Selection
Positive: low‑affinity self‑MHC binding → survival → lineage choice.
Negative: high‑affinity self‑antigen binding → apoptosis or Treg conversion.
Exhausted vs Anergic T cells
Exhausted: chronic antigen, high inhibitory receptors, partial function, reversible with checkpoint blockade.
Anergic: lack of co‑stimulation, functional inactivation, usually irreversible without cytokine rescue.
Checkpoint Inhibitor vs Conventional Immunosuppression
Inhibitor: lifts brakes → boosts immunity (cancer, chronic infection).
Immunosuppression: adds brakes → prevents graft rejection, autoimmunity.
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⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All Tregs arise from negative selection.” – Only a subset of strongly self‑reactive thymocytes become FOXP3⁺ Tregs; most are deleted.
“Exhausted T cells are dead.” – They are alive but functionally impaired; they can be reinvigorated with checkpoint blockade.
“CD28 is only expressed on naive T cells.” – Activated and memory T cells also retain CD28, though expression can be down‑regulated in chronic stimulation.
“MHC class I presents only viral peptides.” – It presents any intracellular peptide, including self, tumor, and bacterial peptides.
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🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Goldilocks selection” – Thymocytes must bind self‑MHC just right: too weak → death by neglect; too strong → deletion or Treg conversion.
“Two‑key lock” – TCR is key 1; CD28‑B7 is key 2. Both must turn to unlock full activation; missing key leaves the lock in a “jammed” (anergic) state.
“Exhaustion as a dimmer switch” – Chronic stimulation slowly turns down cytokine production and cytotoxicity, rather than an on/off switch.
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🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
γδ T cells: recognize non‑peptide antigens (e.g., phospho‑antigens) and do not undergo classic positive/negative selection.
NKT cells: respond to glycolipids presented by CD1d, not classical MHC.
Peripheral Treg induction: naive CD4⁺ T cells can become FOXP3⁺ Tregs in the periphery under tolerogenic cytokine milieu (e.g., TGF‑β).
Memory T‑cell subsets: central memory cells retain CCR7 → home to lymph nodes; tissue‑resident cells stay in peripheral tissues and do not recirculate.
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📍 When to Use Which
Diagnosing T‑cell deficiency → assess CD4⁺ and CD8⁺ counts; severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) if both low.
Choosing checkpoint therapy → high PD‑1/TIM‑3 co‑expression → consider anti‑PD‑1 ± anti‑TIM‑3.
Managing transplant tolerance → aim to promote T‑cell exhaustion or expand Tregs; avoid strong checkpoint blockade.
Selecting activation markers → early activation (within hours): CD69; proliferation (days): CD25 up‑regulation.
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👀 Patterns to Recognize
MHC‑restriction pattern: CD4⁺ → peptide‑MHC II; CD8⁺ → peptide‑MHC I.
Exhaustion pattern: ↑ inhibitory receptors and ↓ cytokine output (IL‑2, IFN‑γ).
Selection pattern in thymus: DN → DP → SP (single‑positive) with checkpoint (positive vs negative) dictated by affinity.
Signal cascade pattern: TCR → Lck → ZAP‑70 → LAT → PLC‑γ → Ca²⁺/DAG → NFAT/NF‑κB/AP‑1 → IL‑2 transcription.
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🗂️ Exam Traps
“All CD8⁺ T cells are cytotoxic.” – Some CD8⁺ cells can have regulatory functions (e.g., CD8⁺ Tregs).
“Negative selection eliminates all self‑reactive cells.” – A small fraction becomes Tregs; complete elimination would cause autoimmunity.
“PD‑1 blockade always cures cancer.” – Only works when tumor‑infiltrating T cells are exhausted; some tumors lack PD‑L1 or have other immune evasion mechanisms.
“Absence of co‑stimulation only causes apoptosis.” – It causes functional anergy, not immediate cell death.
“Memory T cells are always CD45RO⁺.” – While common, some memory subsets (e.g., tissue‑resident) have distinct surface phenotypes (CD103⁺).
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