主要组织相容性复合体
生物
CD8型
MHC限制
肽
T细胞受体
剧目
MHC I级
否定选择
T细胞
抗原
细胞生物学
免疫学
免疫系统
遗传学
基因
生物化学
基因组
物理
声学
作者
Baomei Wang,Tina Primeau,Nancy B. Myers,Henry W. Rohrs,Michael L. Gross,Lonnie Lybarger,Ted H. Hansen,Janet M. Connolly
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2009-11-06
卷期号:326 (5954): 871-874
被引量:46
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1177627
摘要
Goldilocks Immunology T cells are carefully calibrated in the thymus to react to invading pathogens and to ignore the self. This occurs through interactions between the T cell receptor and major histocompatibility complexes (MHCs) expressing self-peptides. A Goldilocks-like selection process is carried out whereby T cells that do not react or react too strongly to self-peptide MHCs are deleted, whereas those with interactions that are “just right” are allowed to survive. The result is T cells highly specific for a particular foreign peptide-MHC complex. Receipt of survival signals from “just-right” interactions (positive selection) and deletion of cells that are too reactive (negative selection) are spatially and temporally segregated in the thymus, and it is unclear at which stage T cells acquire their high degree of peptide-MHC specificity. By using mice expressing a single peptide-MHC complex, Wang et al. (p. 871 ) now show that this single complex is sufficient for selection of a CD8 + T cell repertoire with a broad range of specificity. Importantly, recognition of peptide MHC by these cells was highly specific, demonstrating that peptide-MHC specificity is acquired during positive selection in the thymus.
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