Technical articles
Activation Basis, Lineage Commitment, and Functional Differentiation of TH Cell Differentiation Pathways
Activation Basis, Lineage Commitment, and Functional Differentiation of TH Cell Differentiation Pathways
The TH cell differentiation pathway is one of the most critical regulatory networks in the establishment of adaptive immune responses. Under the combined influence of antigen stimulation, costimulatory signals, and the cytokine microenvironment, naïve CD4+ T cells progressively differentiate into helper T-cell subsets with distinct functional orientations. The classical TH cell differentiation model is centered on the balance of immune polarization between TH1 and TH2. With advances in immunological research, additional subsets such as TH17, Tfh, Treg, TH9, TH22, and TH3-like regulatory cells have also been identified. These subsets differ markedly in cytokine secretion profiles, effector mechanisms, and immunoregulatory functions.
Keywords: TH cell differentiation; CD4+ T cell; TH1; TH2; TH3-like regulatory cells; costimulation; cytokines; immune polarization; Treg; TH17.
1. Immunological Positioning of TH Cell Differentiation Pathways
1.1 Basic Division of Labor Between Humoral and Cellular Immunity
(1) B lymphocytes recognize pathogens through antigen-specific receptors and differentiate into antibody-producing cells, thereby constituting the humoral immune response.
(2) The response of T lymphocytes to antigenic stimulation constitutes cellular immunity. Among them, CD8+ T cells mainly mediate cytotoxic functions, whereas CD4+ T cells primarily provide helper, regulatory, and immune-polarizing functions.
(3) The core significance of CD4+ T-cell differentiation lies in its ability to determine whether the immune system is biased toward intracellular defense, humoral immune support, or immunosuppressive regulation through distinct cytokine profiles and downstream effector programs.
1.2 Basic Features of TH Cell Differentiation
(1) TH cell differentiation is not the direct consequence of activation of a single receptor, but rather the integrated result of antigen presentation, costimulatory molecules, the cytokine milieu, and transcriptional regulatory networks.
(2) Helper T-cell differentiation exhibits clear directionality and mutual exclusivity. Once a lineage is established, it often reinforces its own differentiation through cytokine production and transcriptional programs while suppressing alternative lineages.
(3) The core of the classical TH differentiation model is the balance of immune polarization between TH1 and TH2. TH3-like cells, by contrast, more prominently reflect TGF-β-associated regulatory functions and should not be treated as a fully equivalent classical effector lineage alongside TH1 and TH2.
2. Activation of Naïve CD4+ T Cells and the Starting Point of Differentiation
2.1 Antigen Recognition Initiation Layer
(1) The first step in naïve CD4+ T-cell differentiation is the interaction between the antigen-MHC class II complex on antigen-presenting cells and the TCR/CD3/CD4 complex on the T-cell surface.
(2) This recognition process determines whether the T cell enters an antigen-specific activation state and is therefore the necessary prerequisite for subsequent differentiation programs.
2.2 Costimulatory Signal Layer
(1) Activation of naïve CD4+ T cells requires TCR recognition of antigen-MHC class II complexes together with costimulatory signals such as CD28-B7 interaction.
(2) Binding of CD80/B7-1 and CD86/B7-2 to CD28 on T cells enhances IL-2 secretion, promotes expression of the anti-apoptotic molecule BCL-XL, and increases T-cell survival and expansion capacity.
(3) Activated T cells subsequently upregulate CD40L, which binds CD40 on antigen-presenting cells and further enhances APC activation, costimulatory molecule expression, and production of cytokines such as IL-12, thereby amplifying downstream differentiation signals.
2.3 IL-2 Autocrine Amplification Loop
(1) Following activation, naïve T cells can express the IL-2 receptor and secrete IL-2.
(2) IL-2 acts in an autocrine manner through IL-2R to promote T-cell expansion and sustain the activated state.
(3) IL-2 is not only a proliferative factor, but also an important supportive signal for stable establishment of early helper T-cell differentiation programs.
3. Transition From THp to TH0
3.1 Basic Properties of THp Cells
(1) Helper T-cell precursors that have not yet encountered antigen are commonly referred to as THp, or T helper precursors.
(2) THp cells are not functionally fixed resting cells, but undirected precursor cells with high differentiation potential.
(3) Traditional views consider THp cells to mainly produce IL-2, but during the initial activation phase, their cytokine expression capacity may show a certain degree of diversity.
3.2 TH0 Transitional State
(1) After receiving antigenic stimulation and innate immune signals, THp cells may enter a transitional state that is not yet fully polarized, commonly referred to as TH0.
(2) TH0 cells can simultaneously secrete IL-4 and IFN-γ, and are therefore often regarded as the uncommitted precursor stage preceding TH1 and TH2 differentiation.
(3) TH0 does not necessarily represent a single stable and independent subset, but more likely reflects a group of activated CD4+ T cells that have not yet completed lineage commitment and retain the potential to express multiple cytokines.
4. TH1 Cell Differentiation Pathway
4.1 Inductive Conditions for TH1 Differentiation
(1) TH1 differentiation is mainly driven by IL-12 and IFN-γ. IL-12 derived from antigen-presenting cells promotes TH1 polarization through STAT4, whereas IFN-γ activates STAT1, induces T-bet expression, and further reinforces the TH1 differentiation program.
(2) Bacterial components such as LPS can activate dendritic cells and macrophages, promoting the production of IL-12 and other pro-inflammatory cytokines, thereby indirectly enhancing TH1-type immune polarization. TH1 differentiation is commonly associated with immune responses against intracellular pathogens.
4.2 Cytokine Secretion Profile of TH1 Cells
TH1 cells mainly secrete IFN-γ, IL-2, and LT-α.
Overall, this secretion profile is pro-inflammatory and is primarily directed toward strengthening phagocyte-dependent host defense.
4.3 Major Functions of TH1 Cells
(1) TH1 cells can activate macrophages through IFN-γ, thereby enhancing their ability to kill and clear intracellular pathogens.
(2) TH1 polarization generally corresponds to a stronger cellular immune response, especially suitable for combating intracellular parasitic bacteria and viral infections.
(3) When TH1 responses are excessive, they may also drive persistent inflammation and are associated with the development and progression of certain autoimmune diseases.
4.4 Transcriptional Regulation of TH1 Differentiation
TH1 differentiation is mainly regulated by T-bet, STAT1, and STAT4. IFN-γ-STAT1 signaling helps induce T-bet expression, whereas IL-12-STAT4 signaling further promotes TH1 polarization and IFN-γ production.
Together, these transcriptional regulatory networks establish the TH1-specific expression program and suppress TH2-type differentiation.
5. TH2 Cell Differentiation Pathway
5.1 Inductive Conditions for TH2 Differentiation
(1) TH2 differentiation is mainly driven by IL-4, which activates STAT6 and promotes GATA-3 expression, thereby establishing the TH2 differentiation program.
(2) Helminth and other parasitic infections, allergen exposure, and certain extracellular pathogen-associated stimuli can induce a TH2-biased immune environment, thereby directing the host toward humoral immunity, eosinophil responses, and mucosal barrier-associated defense mechanisms.
5.2 Cytokine Secretion Profile of TH2 Cells
The classical cytokine secretion profile of TH2 cells is centered on IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13, with IL-9 and IL-10 also expressed in certain contexts.
Overall, this secretion profile is more closely associated with humoral immune support, eosinophil recruitment, mucus production, allergic inflammation, and defense against extracellular pathogens. TGF-β is more commonly associated with Treg or TH3-like regulatory cells and should not be listed as a major classical TH2 cytokine.
5.3 Major Functions of TH2 Cells
(1) TH2 cells promote B-cell activation, antibody production, and immunoglobulin class switching.
(2) TH2 responses are mainly associated with protective host responses that are not dependent on phagocyte-mediated clearance, particularly in defense against parasitic infections.
(3) When TH2 polarization is enhanced, the risk of allergic inflammation, asthma, and other atopic diseases increases.
5.4 Transcriptional Regulation of TH2 Differentiation
TH2 differentiation is mainly regulated by STAT6, GATA-3, c-Maf, and members of the NFAT family.
These transcription factors jointly promote TH2-type cytokine expression and restrict establishment of the TH1 lineage.
6. TH3-like Cell Differentiation Pathway
6.1 Basic Properties of TH3-like cells
(1) TH3 generally refers to a population of CD4+ regulatory T cells associated with oral tolerance, mucosal immune regulation, and TGF-β secretion.
(2) The classification status of TH3-like cells differs from that of the classical effector TH1/TH2 lineages. Their core feature is not enhancement of inflammatory clearance responses, but participation in immunosuppression, local tolerance, and limitation of inflammation through factors such as TGF-β.
6.2 Functional Secretion Characteristics of TH3-like cells
The most representative secretory product of TH3-like cells is TGF-β, and IL-10 may also be expressed in some contexts.
This feature gives TH3-like cells particular importance in immunosuppression, oral tolerance, mucosal tolerance, and local limitation of inflammation.
6.3 Major Functions of TH3-like cells
(1) TH3-like cells can restrain excessive immune responses and maintain local immune homeostasis.
(2) TH3 is closely associated with the establishment of immune tolerance, especially in mucosal immunity and oral tolerance.
(3) The major role of TH3 is not to enhance inflammation, but to regulate and constrain effector immune responses.
7. Mutual Restriction Mechanisms Between TH1 and TH2
7.1 Cross-Regulation by Cytokines
(1) IFN-γ secreted by TH1 cells not only promotes TH1 self-differentiation, but also suppresses TH2 differentiation programs.
(2) TH2-associated IL-4 promotes TH2 self-differentiation and suppresses TH1 programs, whereas IL-10 more commonly weakens TH1-type responses indirectly by inhibiting antigen-presenting cell activation and IL-12 production.
7.2 Biological Significance of Immune Polarization Balance
(1) The relative proportion of TH1 and TH2 may be regarded as a functional switch through which the immune system establishes polarization under different pathogenic stimuli.
(2) Different pathogens, tissue environments, and inflammatory contexts can drive this balance in different directions, thereby determining the mode of host defense.
(3) Once one direction remains dominant over a prolonged period, the host may exhibit pathological consequences such as allergy, susceptibility to chronic infection, or autoimmune abnormalities.
8. Phenotypic and Functional Characteristics of TH Cells
8.1 Phenotypic Characteristics of TH1 Cells
(1) Chemokine receptor expression features
Common chemokine receptors associated with TH1 cells include CXCR3 and CCR5.
These molecules are closely related to TH1-cell migration toward inflammatory sites and participation in cellular immune responses.
(2) Functional output characteristics
The core functional features of TH1 cells are secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-γ and IL-2, together with enhancement of phagocyte-dependent defense.
8.2 Phenotypic Characteristics of TH2 Cells
(1) Chemokine receptor expression features
Common chemokine receptors associated with TH2 cells include CCR3, CCR4, and CCR8; in some settings, expression of CXCR4 and CCR7 can also be observed.
These molecules are related to migration of TH2 cells into peripheral tissues and their participation in mucosal immunity and allergic inflammatory responses.
(2) Surface molecule-related characteristics
CD30, a member of the TNF superfamily, is also often considered a surface molecule associated with the activation state of TH2 cells.
In some studies, CD30 may serve as an auxiliary reference indicator of TH2 polarization.
(3) Principles for identification
It should be emphasized that chemokine receptors and surface molecules mainly reflect TH2-associated phenotypic characteristics rather than serving as decisive criteria on their own. Identification of TH2 cells should still be based on integrated analysis of cytokine secretion profiles such as IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 together with key transcription factors such as GATA-3.
8.3 Functional Characteristics of TH3-like cells
(1) The main feature of TH3-like cells is immunoregulatory function represented by TGF-β secretion.
(2) Compared with TH1 and TH2, TH3 is more focused on maintaining immunosuppression and local tolerance rather than directly performing classical effector clearance functions.
9. Abnormal TH Cell Differentiation and Disease
9.1 Allergy and Atopic Disease
When TH2 cells are relatively overexpanded, sustained elevation of cytokines such as IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 can occur, thereby promoting allergic inflammation and the development of atopic diseases.
9.2 Autoimmune Disease
In the classical TH1/TH2 model, enhanced TH1-associated pro-inflammatory responses are commonly associated with certain autoimmune diseases. However, in the modern framework of TH cell differentiation, TH17/Treg imbalance is also an important mechanism underlying autoimmune disease and chronic inflammation. Therefore, autoimmune diseases should not be explained solely by TH1/TH2 imbalance.
9.3 Chronic Infection and Immune Evasion
Certain chronic infections can weaken IFN-γ- and macrophage activation-centered intracellular defense mechanisms by altering the cytokine environment, inducing immunosuppression, or causing insufficient TH1 responses. Some parasitic infections or persistent inflammatory contexts may also be accompanied by enhanced TH2 polarization, thereby affecting the efficiency of TH1-mediated pathogen clearance.
10. Product Tables Related to TH Cell Differentiation Pathways
10.1 Product Table for Initial TH Cell Activation and the Costimulatory Layer
Product Type | Catalog No. | Name | Grade and Purity | Suitable Research Direction / Use |
HLA-II antibody | HLA Class II DRB1 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free, ExactAb™, Azide Free, Validated, High Performance, See COA | Suitable for antigen presentation and MHC II-related detection | |
HLA-DR antibody | HLA-DR Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,High Performance,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),0.5 mg/mL | Suitable for detection of surface HLA-DR on APCs | |
HLA-DR antibody | HLA-DR Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,High Performance,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),1.0 mg/mL | Suitable for HLA-DR detection | |
Recombinant HLA-DR antibody | Recombinant HLA-DR Antibody | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Recombinant,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,High Performance,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for HLA-DR detection | |
Recombinant HLA-DRA protein | Recombinant Human HLA-DRA Protein | Carrier Free,Azide Free,His Tag,≥90%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for MHC II-related functional studies | |
CD28 antibody | CD28 Armenian Hamster mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,See COA | Suitable for T-cell costimulation detection | |
CD28 antibody | CD28 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for CD28 detection | |
Recombinant CD28 antibody | Recombinant CD28 Antibody | Carrier Free,Recombinant,ExactAb™,Low Endotoxin,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥99%(SEC-HPLC),See COA | Suitable for CD28 detection | |
Recombinant human CD28 protein | Recombinant Human CD28 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for CD28 functional studies | |
CD40 antibody | CD40 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free, ExactAb™, Validated, See COA | Suitable for APC activation and CD40 detection | |
CD40 antibody | CD40 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,High Performance,0.5 mg/mL | Suitable for CD40 detection | |
CD40L antibody | CD154/CD40L Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for CD40L detection | |
Recombinant human CD40L protein | Recombinant Human CD40 Ligand/TNFSF5 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE&HPLC) | Suitable for functional stimulation studies of CD40L | |
Recombinant human CD40 protein | Recombinant Human CD40 Protein | Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,Fc Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for studies of CD40-CD40L interaction | |
IL-2 antibody | IL-2 Rat mAb | Carrier Free,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for IL-2 detection after initial T-cell activation | |
Recombinant human IL-2 protein | Recombinant Human IL-2 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for IL-2 stimulation and expansion experiments | |
Recombinant mouse IL-2 protein | Recombinant Mouse IL-2 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for mouse T-cell activation studies | |
IL-2Rβ antibody | CD122/IL-2Rβ Rat mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,See COA | Suitable for IL-2Rβ detection | |
Recombinant IL-2Rα/CD25 protein | Recombinant Human CD25/IL-2R alpha Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,His Tag,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for IL-2Rα functional studies | |
Recombinant IL-2Rβ protein | Recombinant Human IL-2 R beta Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,≥90%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for IL-2Rβ functional studies | |
Human IL-2 ELISA | Human Interleukin 2 (IL-2) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-2 | |
Human IL-2Rα/CD25 ELISA | Human Interleukin 2 Receptor Alpha (IL-2Rα/CD25) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of CD25 | |
Human IL-2Rβ ELISA | Human Interleukin 2 Receptor Beta (IL-2Rβ) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of IL-2Rβ |
10.2 Product Table Related to TH1 Differentiation
Product Type | Catalog No. | Name | Grade and Purity | Suitable Research Direction / Use |
IFN-γ neutralizing antibody | Anti-Mouse IFN gamma Antibody | ≥95% | Suitable for mouse IFN-γ blockade and TH1 functional validation | |
IFNGR1 antibody | IFNGR1/CD119 Armenian hamster mAb | Carrier Free,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for IFN-γ receptor detection | |
IFNGR1 antibody | IFNGR1/CD119 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,Low Endotoxin,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE&HPLC),See COA | Suitable for detection of TH1-related IFN-γ signaling | |
IL-12 p40 antibody | IL-12 p40 Rat mAb | Carrier Free,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for IL-12-related detection | |
IL-12 p70 antibody | IL-12 p70 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,See COA | Suitable for IL-12 p70 detection | |
IL-12 p70 antibody | IL-12 p70 Rat mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for IL-12 p70 detection | |
IL-12 protein | Recombinant Human IL-12 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,High Performance,His Tag,PBS Only,≥90%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for TH1 induction studies | |
IL-12 protein | Recombinant Human IL-12 Protein | ActiBioPure™, Bioactive, Animal Free, Carrier Free, Azide Free, High performance, ≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for TH1 polarization studies | |
Mouse IL-12 protein | Recombinant Mouse IL-12 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for mouse TH1 differentiation studies | |
IL-12B protein | Recombinant Human IL-12 p40 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for IL-12 p40-related studies | |
IL-12/23 p40 protein | Recombinant Human IL-12/IL-23 p40 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,His Tag,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for TH1/TH17-related differentiation studies | |
IL-18 antibody | IL-18 Mouse mAb | Carrier Free,ExactAb™,Azide Free,Validated,High Performance,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),1.0 mg/mL | Suitable for detection of TH1 auxiliary inducing factors | |
IL-18 protein | Recombinant Human IL-18 Protein | Animal Free, Carrier Free, Bioactive, ActiBioPure™, Azide Free, High Performance, ≥95%(SDS-PAGE&HPLC) | Suitable for auxiliary stimulation studies for TH1 polarization | |
Human IL-12/P70 ELISA | Human Interleukin 12 (IL-12/P70) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-12 | |
Human IL-12B ELISA | Human Interleukin 12B (IL-12B) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-12B | |
Human IL-18 ELISA | Human Interleukin 18 (IL-18) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-18 | |
Mouse IL-12 ELISA | Mouse Interleukin 12 (IL-12) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for mouse IL-12 detection | |
Mouse IL-18 ELISA | Mouse Interleukin 18 (IL-18) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for mouse IL-18 detection |
10.3 Product Table Related to TH2 Differentiation
Product Type | Catalog No. | Name | Grade and Purity | Suitable Research Direction / Use |
anti-IL-4 antibody | Pascolizumab (anti-IL-4) | Carrier Free, Recombinant, ExactAb™, Low Endotoxin, Azide Free, Validated, Animal Free, ≥95%(SDS-PAGE&SEC-HPLC), See COA | Suitable for IL-4 blockade and TH2 functional validation | |
Recombinant human IL-4 protein | Recombinant Human IL-4 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for TH2 induction studies | |
Recombinant human IL-4 protein | Recombinant Human IL-4 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for TH2 polarization studies | |
Recombinant mouse IL-4 protein | Recombinant Mouse IL-4 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for mouse TH2 differentiation studies | |
Recombinant rat IL-4 protein | Recombinant Rat IL-4 Protein | Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE),expressed in E. coli; See COA | Suitable for rat TH2 studies | |
IL-4Rα protein | Recombinant Human IL-4R alpha Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,High Performance,His Tag,PBS Only,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for studies of the IL-4/IL-4R axis | |
Human IL-4 ELISA | Human Interleukin 4 (IL-4) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-4 | |
Human IL-4R/CD124 ELISA | Human Interleukin 4 Receptor (IL-4R/CD124) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for human IL-4R detection | |
Rat IL-4 ELISA | Rat Interleukin 4 (IL-4) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for rat IL-4 detection | |
Mouse IL-4 ELISA | Mouse Interleukin 4 (IL-4) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for mouse IL-4 detection | |
Recombinant human IL-10 protein | Recombinant Human IL-10 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,His Tag,PBS Only,≥90%(SDS-PAGE),See COA | Suitable for TH2/regulatory function studies | |
Recombinant mouse IL-10 protein | Recombinant Mouse IL-10 Protein | Animal Free,Carrier Free,Bioactive,ActiBioPure™,Azide Free,High Performance,His Tag,≥95%(SDS-PAGE) | Suitable for mouse TH2/regulatory studies | |
Human IL-10 ELISA | Human Interleukin 10 (IL-10) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for quantitative detection of human IL-10 | |
Rat IL-10 ELISA | Rat Interleukin 10 (IL-10) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for rat IL-10 detection | |
Mouse IL-10 ELISA | Mouse Interleukin 10 (IL-10) ELISA Kit | BioReagent | Suitable for mouse IL-10 detection |
The essence of the TH cell differentiation pathway is the process by which naïve CD4+ T cells polarize into different functional subsets under the combined influence of antigen stimulation, costimulatory signaling, cytokine environments, and transcriptional programs. TH1 and TH2 constitute the core of the classical immune polarization model, whereas TH3-like regulatory cells more prominently reflect TGF-β-associated immune tolerance and local immunoregulation. In the modern framework of TH cell differentiation, subsets such as TH17, Tfh, and Treg should also be considered to fully understand the functional specialization of helper T cells.
For more related articles, please see below:
[5] Wnt Signaling
