The thymus is the primary organ for the generation of naive T cells, a key component of the immune system. Tolerance of T cells to self is achieved primarily in the thymic medulla, where immature T cells (thymocytes) sample self-peptides presented by medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs). A sufficiently strong interaction activates the thymocytes leading to negative selection. A key question of current interest is whether there is any structure in the manner in which mTECs present peptides: can any mTEC present any peptide at any time, or are there particular patterns of correlated peptide presentation? We investigate this question using a mathematical model of negative selection. We find that correlated patterns of peptide presentation...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
AbstractAlthough the thymus produces many immature thymocytes, few of these cells mature. Positive s...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
The thymus is the primary organ for the generation of naive T cells, a key component of the immune s...
The thymus is the primary organ for the generation of naive T cells, a key component of the immune s...
The thymus employs two primary mechanisms to maintain self-tolerance: negative selection and the gen...
The thymus employs two primary mechanisms to maintain self-tolerance: negative selection and the gen...
AbstractTo understand how thymic selection gives rise to T cells that are capable of major histocomp...
AbstractAlthough the thymus produces many immature thymocytes, few of these cells mature. Positive s...
Conventional and regulatory T cells develop in the thymus where they are exposed to samples of self-...
Thymic positive and negative selection of developing T lymphocytes confronts us with a paradox: How ...
Recent evidence suggests that TCR down-regulation directly reflects the number of TCRs that have eng...
During T cell development, thymocytes which are tolerant to self-peptides but reactive to foreign pe...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
AbstractAlthough the thymus produces many immature thymocytes, few of these cells mature. Positive s...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
The thymus is the primary organ for the generation of naive T cells, a key component of the immune s...
The thymus is the primary organ for the generation of naive T cells, a key component of the immune s...
The thymus employs two primary mechanisms to maintain self-tolerance: negative selection and the gen...
The thymus employs two primary mechanisms to maintain self-tolerance: negative selection and the gen...
AbstractTo understand how thymic selection gives rise to T cells that are capable of major histocomp...
AbstractAlthough the thymus produces many immature thymocytes, few of these cells mature. Positive s...
Conventional and regulatory T cells develop in the thymus where they are exposed to samples of self-...
Thymic positive and negative selection of developing T lymphocytes confronts us with a paradox: How ...
Recent evidence suggests that TCR down-regulation directly reflects the number of TCRs that have eng...
During T cell development, thymocytes which are tolerant to self-peptides but reactive to foreign pe...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...
AbstractAlthough the thymus produces many immature thymocytes, few of these cells mature. Positive s...
Our immune system can destroy most cells in our body, an ability that needs to be tightly controlled...