Antigen Presentation and T Cell Stimulation by Dendritic Cells
Inserm · Institut Gustave Roussy · +1 more institution
Abstract
Dendritic cells take up antigens in peripheral tissues, process them into proteolytic peptides, and load these peptides onto major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and II molecules. Dendritic cells then migrate to secondary lymphoid organs and become competent to present antigens to T lymphocytes, thus initiating antigen-specific immune responses, or immunological tolerance. Antigen presentation in dendritic cells is finely regulated: antigen uptake, intracellular transport and degradation, and the traffic of MHC molecules are different in dendritic cells as compared to other antigen-presenting cells. These specializations account for dendritic cells' unique role in the initiation of immune responses…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 318
Authors
5- PGPierre GuermonprezCorresponding
Inserm, Institut Gustave Roussy, Institut Curie
- JVJenny Valladeau
Inserm, Institut Gustave Roussy, Institut Curie
- LZLaurence Zitvogel
Inserm, Institut Gustave Roussy, Institut Curie
- CTClotilde Théry
Inserm, Institut Gustave Roussy, Institut Curie
- SASebastián Amigorena
Inserm, Institut Gustave Roussy, Institut Curie
Topics & keywords
- Antigen presentation
- Biology
- Antigen
- Antigen-presenting cell
- Major histocompatibility complex
- Immune system
- Cell biology
- Dendritic cell