Tracking down the tiniest of forces: How T cells detect inva

Tracking down the tiniest of forces: How T cells detect invaders


 E-Mail
IMAGE: The T cell (yellow) touches the antigen-presenting cell. Tiny forces are applied on the surface, eventually the connection breaks.
view more 
Credit: TU Wien / MedUni Wien
T-cells play a central role in our immune system: by means of their so-called T-cell receptors (TCR) they make out dangerous invaders or cancer cells in the body and then trigger an immune reaction. On a molecular level, this recognition process is still not sufficiently understood.
Intriguing observations have now been made by an interdisciplinary Viennese team of immunologists, biochemists and biophysicists. In a joint project funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund and the FWF, they investigated which mechanical processes take place when an antigen is recognized: As T cells move their TCRs pull on the antigen with a tiny force - about five pico-newtons (5 x 10-12 or 0.0000000005 newtons). This is not only sufficient to break the bonds between the TCRs and the antigen, it also helps T cells to find out whether they are interacting indeed with the antigen they are looking for. These results have now been published in the scientific journal "

Related Keywords

Vienna , Wien , Austria , Angewandte Immunologie , Technische Universit , Florian Kellner , Medizinische Universit , Johannes Huppa , Angewandte Physik , Lukas Schrangl , Nature Communications , Technology Fund , Vienna Science , Gerhard Sch , Meduni Vienna , Biomechanics Biophysics , Cell Biology , Medicine Health , Immunology Allergies Asthma , வியன்னா , வீந் , ஆஸ்ட்ரியா , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் , தொழில்நுட்பம் நிதி , வியன்னா அறிவியல் , ஜெர்ஹார்ட் ஸ்ச் , பயோமெக்கானிக்ஸ் உயிர் இயற்பியல் ,

© 2025 Vimarsana