Abstract

Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled. To prevent autoimmunity, the thymic medulla exposes developing T cells to normal “self” peptides and prevents any responders from entering the bloodstream. However, a substantial number of self-reactive T cells nevertheless reaches the periphery, implying that T cells do not encounter all self peptides during this negative selection process. It is unclear if T cells can still discriminate foreign peptides from self peptides they haven’t encountered during negative selection. We use an “artificial immune system”—a machine learning model of the T cell repertoire—to investigate how negative selection could alter the recognition of self peptides that are absent from the thymus. Our model reveals a surprising new role for T cell cross-reactivity in this context: moderate T cell cross-reactivity should skew the post-selection repertoire towards peptides that differ systematically from self. Moreover, even some self-like foreign peptides can be distinguished provided that the peptides presented in the thymus are not too similar to each other. Thus, our model predicts that negative selection on a well-chosen subset of self peptides would generate a repertoire that tolerates even “unseen” self peptides better than foreign peptides. This effect would resemble a “generalization” process as it is found in learning systems. We discuss potential experimental approaches to test our theory.

Highlights

  • To eliminate pathogens without damaging healthy cells, the immune system must discriminate between self and foreign

  • In our artificial immune system” (AIS) model, we found that negative selection on an incomplete set of self peptides can bias a T cell repertoire towards foreign recognition

  • This provides a proof of the principle that, under the right circumstances, negative selection can behave like a learning algorithm: it can let T cell repertoires “learn by example” through generalization

Read more

Summary

Introduction

To eliminate pathogens without damaging healthy cells, the immune system must discriminate between self and foreign (nonself). Humans have a repertoire of at least 107 different T cells [3], each expressing one or two of the >1015 unique receptor sequences that can arise from the stochastic recombination of V(D)J gene segments and addition of non-templated nucleotides [4,5]. These T cell receptors (TCRs) recognize short foreign peptides presented on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules on the surface of infected or cancerous cells.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call