Single-positive thymocytes that successfully complete positive and negative selection must still undergo one final step, generally termed T cell maturation, before they gain functional competency and enter the long-lived T cell pool. Maturation initiates after positive selection in single-positive thymocytes and continues in the periphery in recent thymic emigrants, before these newly produced T cells gain functional competency and are ready to participate in the immune response as peripheral naive T cells. Recent work using genetically altered mice demonstrates that T cell maturation is not a single process, but a series of steps that occur independently and sequentially after positive selection. This review focuses on the changes that occur during T cell maturation, as well as the molecules and pathways that are critical at each step.
CITATION STYLE
Hogquist, K. A., Xing, Y., Hsu, F.-C., & Shapiro, V. S. (2015). T Cell Adolescence: Maturation Events Beyond Positive Selection. The Journal of Immunology, 195(4), 1351–1357. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1501050
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