| Literature DB >> 18236099 |
José Guilherme Chaui-Berlinck1, José Alexandre Marzagão Barbuto, Luiz Henrique Alves Monteiro.
Abstract
A continuous harvest effort can lead a population to extinction. How an "unconscious" immune system would perpetrate such an effort in order to eliminate a self-replicating antigen (a pathogen) becomes an intriguing problem if the system responses are functions of the pathogen population: the responses cannot be a continuous effort as the pathogen vanishes. On theoretical grounds, we show some qualities an immune response must have to support pathogen elimination. Then, three specific mechanisms are addressed: a pathogen-independent positive feedback loop among the responding cells of the system (e.g., B-lymphocyte and T-helper); the persistence of antigen bound to presenting cells; and the programmed expansion/contraction of a pool of responding cells. The maintenance of responding cells due to these mechanisms is the essential feature to the effective clearance of self-replicating agents. Thus, evolutionarily, the primary function of a helper lymphocyte would be to amplify a response and the primary function of memory would be the very elimination of pathogens.Year: 2004 PMID: 18236099 DOI: 10.1016/j.thbio.2004.01.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theory Biosci ISSN: 1431-7613 Impact factor: 1.919