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New discovery about T cells is reported

PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 1 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they have found a way to keep the body's T cells in prime shape for fighting infection and cancer.

Researchers at the Wistar Institute said they have discovered seven different receptors on the outside of the body's immune system T cells that can "tamp down immune responses during a prolonged battle with an infectious pathogen or against developing cancer."

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Assistant Professor E. John Wherry, the study's lead author, said the research also showed the seven receptors likely control different aspects of T cell responses, such as division or expansion and controlling viral replication.

"This amount of control over T cells' response is remarkable," he said. "It suggests that layers of negative regulation exist on exhausted T cells from coexpression of multiple inhibitory receptors. My bet is that these receptors inhibit different aspects of the T cells' response but that the net result of their activation is to turn specific T cell populations off.

"That suggests it may be possible to not only dramatically enhance anti-viral or anti-tumor T cell responses but also to fine tune which response you want to enhance in order to reverse T cell exhaustion and continue fighting an infection or disease."

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The new research is reported online in the journal Nature Immunology.

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