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Despite central tolerance, some self-reactive T cells generally escape the thymus and enter the peripheral bloodstream. Therefore, a second line of defense called peripheral tolerance is needed to protect against autoimmune disease. Peripheral tolerance involves mechanisms of anergy and inhibition of self-reactive T cells by regulatory T cells . Anergy refers to a state of nonresponsiveness to antigen stimulation. In the case of self-reactive T cells that escape the thymus, lack of an essential co-stimulatory signal required for activation causes anergy and prevents autoimmune activation. Regulatory T cells participate in peripheral tolerance by inhibiting the activation and function of self-reactive T cells and by secreting anti-inflammatory cytokines.

It is not completely understood what events specifically direct maturation of thymocytes into regulatory T cells. Current theories suggest the critical events may occur during the third step of thymic selection, when most self-reactive T cells are eliminated. Regulatory T cells may receive a unique signal that is below the threshold required to target them for negative selection and apoptosis. Consequently, these cells continue to mature and then exit the thymus, armed to inhibit the activation of self-reactive T cells.

It has been estimated that the three steps of thymic selection eliminate 98% of thymocytes. The remaining 2% that exit the thymus migrate through the bloodstream and lymphatic system to sites of secondary lymphoid organs/tissues, such as the lymph nodes , spleen , and tonsils ( [link] ), where they await activation through the presentation of specific antigens by APCs. Until they are activated, they are known as mature naïve T cells .

a) A drawing of a femur; a long bone with a round head. B) A cross section of the head of the femur.
(a) Red bone marrow can be found in the head of the femur (thighbone) and is also present in the flat bones of the body, such as the ilium and the scapula. (b) Red bone marrow is the site of production and differentiation of many formed elements of blood, including erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets. The yellow bone marrow is populated primarily with adipose cells.
A drawing of the thymus (a structure sitting on the surface of the heart); the spleen (a kidney shaped structure in the upper left abdomen; the right lymphatic duct entering vein (a tube in the neck); lymph nodes (enlarged regions of lymph ducts); and a tonsil in the cheek. A callout shows a micrograph of the thymus which has a surface layer labeled fibrous capsule, a central tissue labeled medulla, out tissue labeled cortex, and lighter branches in the cortex labeled trabeculae.
The thymus is a bi-lobed, H-shaped glandular organ that is located just above the heart. It is surrounded by a fibrous capsule of connective tissue. The darkly staining cortex and the lighter staining medulla of individual lobules are clearly visible in the light micrograph of the thymus of a newborn (top right, LM × 100). (credit micrograph: modification of micrograph provided by the Regents of University of Michigan Medical School © 2012)
  • What anatomical sites are involved in T cell production and maturation?
  • What are the three steps involved in thymic selection?
  • Why are central tolerance and peripheral tolerance important? What do they prevent?

Classes of t cells

T cells can be categorized into three distinct classes: helper T cells , regulatory T cells, and cytotoxic T cells . These classes are differentiated based on their expression of certain surface molecules, their mode of activation, and their functional roles in adaptive immunity ( [link] ).

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Source:  OpenStax, Microbiology. OpenStax CNX. Nov 01, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12087/1.4
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