4.7 Article

No life without death - apoptosis as prerequisite for T cell activation

期刊

APOPTOSIS
卷 10, 期 4, 页码 707-715

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10495-005-2940-6

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apoptosis; CD8 T cells; cross-priming; tuberculosis

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The orchestrated death of infected cells is key to our understanding of CD8 T cell activation against pathogens. Most intracellular bacteria including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the etiologic agent of tuberculosis, remain enclosed in phagosomes of infected macrophages. CD8 T cells play a critical role in defense of infection and recognize antigens originating from the cytosol presented by MHC-I molecules. Since mycobacteria do not gain access to the cytosolic MHC-I presentation pathway, the fundamental question as to how CD8 T cells encounter mycobacterial antigens remains to be solved. In this review, we focus on solutions for this enigma and describe the detour pathway of T cell activation. Mycobacteria induce cell death of infected macrophages which thereby leave a last message by releasing apoptotic vesicles. Subsequently, these antigen-containing entities are engulfed by dendritic cells which process the mycobacterial cargo for efficient antigen presentation and CD8 T cell activation. Since the dying infected cell is the origin of a protective T cell response destined to preserve life and individuality, the detour pathway represents an altruistic principle at a cellular level which corresponds to the macroscopic world where death is the precondition to perpetuate the living.

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