Dendritic cells are powerful antigen-presenting cells that are essential for the priming of T cell responses.In addition to providing T-cell-receptor ligands and co-stimulatory molecules for naive T cell activation an...Dendritic cells are powerful antigen-presenting cells that are essential for the priming of T cell responses.In addition to providing T-cell-receptor ligands and co-stimulatory molecules for naive T cell activation and expansion,dendritic cells are thought to also provide signals for the differentiation of CD4+T cells into effector T cell populations.The mechanisms by which dendritic cells are able to adapt and respond to the great variety of infectious stimuli they are confronted with,and prime an appropriate CD4+T cell response,are only partly understood.It is known that in the steady-state dendritic cells are highly heterogenous both in phenotype and transcriptional profile,and that this variability is dependent on developmental lineage,maturation stage,and the tissue environment in which dendritic cells are located.Exposure to infectious agents interfaces with this pre-existing heterogeneity by providing ligands for pattern-recognition and toll-like receptors that are variably expressed on different dendritic cell subsets,and elicit production of cytokines and chemokines to support innate cell activation and drive T cell differentiation.Here we review current information on dendritic cell biology,their heterogeneity,and the properties of different dendritic cell subsets.We then consider the signals required for the development of different types of Th immune responses,and the cellular and molecular evidence implicating different subsets of dendritic cells in providing such signals.We outline how dendritic cell subsets tailor their response according to the infectious agent,and how such transcriptional plasticity enables them to drive different types of immune responses.展开更多
基金supported by research grants from the Health Research Council of New Zealand to F.Rthe Malaghan Institute of Medical Research.K.L.H.was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research,New Zealand.
文摘Dendritic cells are powerful antigen-presenting cells that are essential for the priming of T cell responses.In addition to providing T-cell-receptor ligands and co-stimulatory molecules for naive T cell activation and expansion,dendritic cells are thought to also provide signals for the differentiation of CD4+T cells into effector T cell populations.The mechanisms by which dendritic cells are able to adapt and respond to the great variety of infectious stimuli they are confronted with,and prime an appropriate CD4+T cell response,are only partly understood.It is known that in the steady-state dendritic cells are highly heterogenous both in phenotype and transcriptional profile,and that this variability is dependent on developmental lineage,maturation stage,and the tissue environment in which dendritic cells are located.Exposure to infectious agents interfaces with this pre-existing heterogeneity by providing ligands for pattern-recognition and toll-like receptors that are variably expressed on different dendritic cell subsets,and elicit production of cytokines and chemokines to support innate cell activation and drive T cell differentiation.Here we review current information on dendritic cell biology,their heterogeneity,and the properties of different dendritic cell subsets.We then consider the signals required for the development of different types of Th immune responses,and the cellular and molecular evidence implicating different subsets of dendritic cells in providing such signals.We outline how dendritic cell subsets tailor their response according to the infectious agent,and how such transcriptional plasticity enables them to drive different types of immune responses.