Talk abstract:
Models of Immune Memory: On the Role
of Cross-reactive Stimulation, Competition,
and Homeostasis in Maintaining Immune Memory
Rustom Antia, Emory University
There has been much debate on the contribution of processes
such as the persistence of antigen, cross-reactive stimulation,
homeostasis, competition between different lineages of lymphocytes,
and the rate of cell turnover on the duration of immune memory
and the maintenance of the immune repertoire. We use simple
mathematical models to investigate the contributions of these
various processes to the longevity of immune memory (defined
as the rate of decline of the population of antigen-specific
memory cells). The models we develop incorporate a large repertoire
of immune cells, each lineage having distinct antigenic specificities,
and describe the dynamics of the individual lineages and total
population of cells. Our results suggest that if homeostatic
control regulates the total population of memory cells, then,
for a wide range of parameters, immune memory will be long-lived
in the absence of persistent antigen ($T_{1/2} > 1$ year). We
also show that the longevity of memory in this situation will
be insensitive to the relative rates of cross-reactive stimulation,
the rate of turnover of immune cells, and the functional form
of the term for the maintenance of homeostasis. }
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1998-1999
Mathematics in Biology