The way immune cells pick friends from foes can be described by a classic maths puzzle known as the “narrow escape problem”.
That’s a key finding arising from an international collaboration between biologists, immunologists and mathematicians, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The narrow escape problem is a framework often applied in cellular biology. It posits randomly moving particles trapped in a space with only a tiny exit, and calculates the average time required for each one to escape.
“This is a new application for some familiar equations,” says co-author Justin Tzou from Australia’s Macquarie University.
Tzou worked with colleagues at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in the UK, the University of British Columbia in Canada, and the University of Skövde in Sweden to analyse how potential pathogens are probed by T cells, which identify and attack invaders.
The researchers discovered that the equations used in the narrow escape problem play a key role in determining whether an immune response is triggered.
“The narrow escape problem turns out to be a close cousin of the situation with T cell receptors,” Tzou says. “It is about determining how long a diffusing particle remains in a certain region before escaping.”
The unique shape of T cells creates what has been termed a “close-contact zone” for triggering molecules called T cell receptors. Unlike most cells, which have relatively smooth surfaces, T cells are covered in ruffles, bumps and other protrusions.
Scientists have known for a long time that T cell receptor molecules sit on the surface of the cells to recognise enemies and trigger a hostile response.
The receptors contain molecular patterns that mirror those found on the surfaces of bacteria, tumours, and other dangerous interlopers. But exactly how the process of recognition and triggering works – and particularly how it works so quickly and accurately – has been a mystery.
The researchers believe the unusually lumpy shape of the T cell plays a vital role.
The protrusions on the surface mean that its area of contact with a potential enemy cell is very small – only a couple of hundred nanometres across, or a thousand times smaller than the width of a human hair.
And according to the new theory, T cell receptors follow a two-second rule: if they spend more than two seconds in the small contact zone, a chemical process begins to sound the alarm and trigger an attack.
The size of the contact zone depends on the size of the bumps on the surface of the T cell.
“The smaller the zone, the less likely the T cell receptor is able to stay in that zone by chance, triggering an attack,” Tzou says. “It looks like the size of these protrusions keeps the process sensitive to the presence of the invader.”