Abstract:
A simple stochastic model for the interactions between T-cell and Antigen Presenting Cell (APC) system is proposed with a major concern on the effect of T-cell receptor cluster formation on T-cell activation. We consider a ’sample space’ {-1, 1} of interaction events, where ’-1’ (respectively’1’) corresponds to an unfavorable (respectively favorable) interaction between
the T-cell and APC and propose the Hamiltonian model for the binary
sequences of interactions between T-cell and APC system. The specific free energy of the model with respect to a control parameter called ‘generation time’ is calculated via numerical Monte-Carlo simulations. We report the effects on the specific free energy of the strength of the interactions between clusters, that of the number of clusters, of the standard deviation of the distribution of energies associated with the interactions between the T-cell
and APC, and also that of the
discontinuity in the free energy
~
generation time. We cannot see any
~
with respect to the parameter, T -
generation time. However, at T
(= 0.163) we can notice a change in the
~
derivative which shows that the free energy remains constant for T ≥ T . The sustained interaction between the T-cell and the APC leads to intracellular signaling mechanisms that would ultimately cause the activation of the T-
cell. The activated T-cell is no longer the same as the non-activated or a naive T-cell; it would undergo substantial conformational/ geometrical changes as well as internal changes that occur in the nucleus of the T-cell to activate the gene regulation as transcriptional factors leading to launch various activation functions. Hence, the system of interactions between T- cell and the APC evolves into a new state, which we propose here to explain via phase transitions in the Random Energy Model