Peptide contributes to the specificity of positive selection of CD8+ T cells in the thymus

PG Ashton-Rickardt, L Van Kaer, TNM Schumacher… - Cell, 1993 - cell.com
Mice deficient in the gene encoding the peptide transporter associated with antigen
processing (TAPI) have drastically reduced levels of surface expression of MHC class I
molecules and few CD8+ T cells. Addition of class I binding peptides to cultured fetal thymi
from TAP1 mutant mice invariably allowed the rescue of class I expression, while only some
of these peptides promoted the positive selection of CD8+ T cells, which were polyclonal
and specific for the peptide-MHC complex. A nonselecting peptide was converted to a …
Summary
Mice deficient in the gene encoding the peptide transporter associated with antigen processing (TAPI) have drastically reduced levels of surface expression of MHC class I molecules and few CD8+ T cells. Addition of class I binding peptides to cultured fetal thymi from TAP1 mutant mice invariably allowed the rescue of class I expression, while only some of these peptides promoted the positive selection of CD8+ T cells, which were polyclonal and specific for the peptide-MHC complex. A nonselecting peptide was converted to a mixture of selecting peptides when the residues involved in the interaction with TCRs were altered. A mixture of self-peptides derived from C57BL18 thymi induced positive selection of CD8+ T cells at concentrations that gave relatively low class I surface expression. The implication of these observations is that self-peptides determine, in part, the repertoire of specificities exhibited by CD8+ T cells.
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