In vivo antagonism of a T cell response by an endogenously expressed ligand
收藏PubMed Central1998-11-24 更新2026-05-02 收录
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https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC24373/
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资源简介:
3.L2 T cell receptor transgenic T cells are activated by the 64–76 peptide of the mouse hemoglobin d β chain [Hb(64–76)], and their response is antagonized by the position 72 alanine substitution of this peptide (A72). To test the effect of this altered peptide ligand (APL) on 3.L2 T cell function in vivo, a transgene expressing A72 in major histocompatibility complex II positive cells (A72tg) has been introduced into mice. We demonstrate that 3.L2 T cells, when transferred to A72tg(+) mice show a dramatically reduced proliferative response to Hb(64–76). Identical decreased responses were observed using T cells that developed in either A72tg(+) or A72tg(−) hosts. This affect was not attributable to diminished precursor frequency, anergy, or competition for binding to I-E(k) molecules. These results unequivocally demonstrate in vivo antagonism by an endogenous APL and characterize a class of self-peptides that, although inefficient in causing deletion in the thymus, effectively modulate T cell responses in the periphery.
提供机构:
National Academy of Sciences
创建时间:
1998-11-24



