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DOI: 10.1126/science.1139393
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Asymmetric T Lymphocyte Division in the Initiation of Adaptive Immune Responses

John T. Chang,V. Palanivel,Ichiko Kinjyo,Felix Schambach,Andrew M. Intlekofer,Arnob Banerjee,Sarah Longworth,Kristine E. Vinup,Paulus Mrass,Jane Oliaro,Nigel Killeen,Jordan S. Orange,Sarah M. Russell,Wolfgang Weninger,Steven L. Reiner

Cell division
Biology
Effector
2007
A hallmark of mammalian immunity is the heterogeneity of cell fate that exists among pathogen-experienced lymphocytes. We show that a dividing T lymphocyte initially responding to a microbe exhibits unequal partitioning of proteins that mediate signaling, cell fate specification, and asymmetric cell division. Asymmetric segregation of determinants appears to be coordinated by prolonged interaction between the T cell and its antigen-presenting cell before division. Additionally, the first two daughter T cells displayed phenotypic and functional indicators of being differentially fated toward effector and memory lineages. These results suggest a mechanism by which a single lymphocyte can apportion diverse cell fates necessary for adaptive immunity.
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    Asymmetric T Lymphocyte Division in the Initiation of Adaptive Immune Responses” is a paper by John T. Chang V. Palanivel Ichiko Kinjyo Felix Schambach Andrew M. Intlekofer Arnob Banerjee Sarah Longworth Kristine E. Vinup Paulus Mrass Jane Oliaro Nigel Killeen Jordan S. Orange Sarah M. Russell Wolfgang Weninger Steven L. Reiner published in 2007. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.