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Scientists Identify Molecule Critical for Immune Function

by Rajashri on Jul 9 2008 5:17 PM

The body’s immune system depends on a single molecule, a growth factor, without which it is rendered useless, a new study has found.

The study led by Dr Cecile King and PhD student Alexis Vogelzang, from the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney

Human body produces B cells, which make antibodies, and T cells, which help them but the way in which these cells operate and interact with each other are still being studied.

Previous studies had identified a subset of T cells, T follicular helper (TFH) cells that operates in specific environments termed ’germinal centres’, specialised areas within lymph organs where B cells proliferate to form high affinity antibodies whenever we fight infection.

TFH cells play a critical role in that they communicate with, and help activate, B cells.

The researchers found a molecule interleukin 21 (IL-21) is a growth factor for TFH cells.

IL-2’s newly identified growth factor role is only one of several functions, that function is fundamental. Without IL-21, the all-important TFH cells could neither develop nor survive.

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"We already knew that IL-21 was produced by TFH cells and that it was a major initiator of proliferation in B cells," said King.

"We were surprised to find that TFH cells not only produce IL-21, they also absolutely need it to survive and they utilise it to function."

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"We showed that if you take a mouse genetically deficient in IL-21 and immunise it, you don’t get TFH cells and you don’t get antibody production. Conversely, if you put IL-21 receptor sufficient, or normal, T cells into the same mouse, where of course the B cells remain abnormal, you recover the normal immune reaction."

"These specialised T cells are thought to be the ones that direct traffic. They are the only ones that can move into the B cell zone and initiate high affinity antibody production."

"Without IL-21, we probably wouldn’t be completely immunodeficient, just severely compromised. In addition to the high affinity antibodies we’re talking about, our bodies also produce a lot of low affinity antibodies for mopping up infection. That low level response happens around-the-clock and is one of our body’s first lines of defence."

"You could say that IL-21 directs the most finely-tuned aspect of our immune response. The highly specialised weaponry developed on-the-spot to target aggressive invaders."

"This finding suggests novel ways to boost vaccination or natural defences," she added.

The study was published online today in the prestigious international journal Immunity.

Source-ANI
RAS/L


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