Multiscale modeling of the early CD8 T-cell immune response in lymph nodes: An integrative study

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Abstract

CD8 T-cells are critical in controlling infection by intracellular pathogens. Upon encountering antigen presenting cells, T-cell receptor activation promotes the differentiation of naïve CD8 T-cells into strongly proliferating activated and effector stages. We propose a 2D-multiscale computational model to study the maturation of CD8 T-cells in a lymph node controlled by their molecular profile. A novel molecular pathway is presented and converted into an ordinary differential equation model, coupled with a cellular Potts model to describe cell-cell interactions. Key molecular players such as activated IL2 receptor and Tbet levels control the differentiation from naïve into activated and effector stages, respectively, while caspases and Fas-Fas ligand interactions control cell apoptosis. Coupling this molecular model to the cellular scale successfully reproduces qualitatively the evolution of total CD8 T-cell counts observed in mice lymph node, between Day 3 and 5.5 post-infection. Furthermore, this model allows us to make testable predictions of the evolution of the different CD8 T-cell stages.

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Prokopiou, S. A., Barbarroux, L., Bernard, S., Mafille, J., Leverrier, Y., Arpin, C., … Crauste, F. (2014). Multiscale modeling of the early CD8 T-cell immune response in lymph nodes: An integrative study. Computation, 2(4), 159–181. https://doi.org/10.3390/computation2040159

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