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1.
TCR affinity dictates T cell selection in the thymus and also has a high impact on the fate of peripheral T cells. Graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) is a pathological process initiated by activation of donor T cells after adoptive transfer into an allogeneic recipient. How TCR affinity affects the potential of alloreactive T cells to induce GVHD is unclear. Using alloreactive CD4+ and CD8+ TCR transgenic (Tg) T cells, GVHD models are presented that allow for the visualization of how CD8+ alloreactive T cells behave in response to alloantigens with different TCR affinity in the absence or presence of CD4 help. In a nonmyeloablative transplant model where GVHD lethality is due to marrow aplasia, alloreactive CD8+ TCR Tg T cells induced significantly more severe GVHD in the recipients that express an intermediate-affinity alloantigen than in the recipients that express a high-affinity alloantigen. In a myeloablative transplant model where GVHD lethality is due to epithelium injury, CD8+ TCR Tg cells were also more pathogenic in the recipients with an intermediate-affinity alloantigen than in those with a high-affinity alloantigen. The presence of alloreactive CD4+ TCR Tg cells enhanced the potential of CD8+ TCR Tg cells to cause GVHD in recipients with an intermediate-, but not with a high-, affinity alloantigen. These findings underscore that alloantigen affinity and CD4 help control the fate and pathogenicity of alloreactive CD8+ T cells in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Adaptation of the T cell activation threshold may be one mechanism to control autoreactivity. To investigate its occurrence in vivo, we engineered a transgenic mouse model with increased TCR-dependent excitability by expressing a Zap70 gain-of-function mutant (ZAP-YEEI) in postselection CD8 thymocytes and T cells. Increased basal phosphorylation of the Zap70 substrate linker for activation of T cells was detected in ZAP-YEEI-bearing CD8 T cells. However, these cells were not activated, but had reduced levels of TCR and CD5. Moreover, they produced lower cytokine amounts and showed faster dephosphorylation of linker for activation of T cells and ERK upon activation. Normal TCR levels and cytokine production were restored by culturing cells in the absence of TCR/spMHC interaction, demonstrating dynamic tuning of peripheral T cell responses. The effect of avidity for self-ligand(s) on this sensory adaptation was studied by expressing ZAP-YEEI in P14 or HY TCR transgenic backgrounds. Unexpectedly, double-transgenic animals expressed ZAP-YEEI prematurely in double-positive thymocytes, but no overt alteration of selection processes was observed. Instead, modifications of TCR and CD5 expression due to ZAP-YEEI suggested that signal tuning occurred during thymic maturation. Importantly, although P14 x ZAP-YEEI peripheral CD8 T cells were reduced in number and showed lower Ag-induced cytokine production and limited lymphopenia-driven proliferation, the peripheral survival/expansion and Ag responsiveness of HY x ZAP-YEEI cells were enhanced. Our data provide support for central and peripheral sensory T cell adaptation induced as a function of TCR avidity for self-ligands and signaling level. This may contribute to buffer excessive autoreactivity while optimizing TCR repertoire usage.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Studies in Jurkat cells have shown that combined stimulation through the TCR and CD28 is required for activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), suggesting that JNK activity may mediate the costimulatory function of CD28. To examine the role of JNK signaling in CD28 costimulation in normal T cells, murine T cell clones and CD28(+/+) or CD28(-/-) TCR transgenic T cells were used. Although ligation with anti-CD28 mAb augmented JNK activation in Th1 and Th2 clones stimulated with low concentrations of anti-CD3 mAb, higher concentrations of anti-CD3 mAb alone were sufficient for JNK activation even in the absence of anti-CD28. JNK activity was comparably induced in both CD28(+/+) and CD28(-/-) 2C/recombinase-activating gene 2(RAG2)(-/-) T cells stimulated with anti-CD3 mAb alone, and with L(d)/peptide dimers, a direct alphabeta TCR ligand. Moreover, JNK activation was also detected in 2C/RAG2(-/-) T cells stimulated with P815 cells that express the relevant alloantigen L(d) whether or not B7-1 was coexpressed. However, IL-2 production by both Th1 clones and CD28(+/+) 2C/RAG2(-/-) T cells was detected only upon TCR and CD28 coengagement. Thus, CD28 coligation is not necessary, and stimulation through the TCR is sufficient, for JNK activation in normal murine T cells. The concept that JNK mediates the costimulatory function of CD28 needs to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

5.
Functional activation of T cells requires ligation of Ag receptors with specific peptides presented by MHC molecules on APCs concurrent with appropriate contacts of cell surface accessory molecules. Among these accessory molecules, interactions between CD28/CTLA-4 with B7 family members (CD80 and CD86) and CD40 with CD40 ligand (CD40L) play a decisive role in regulating the progression of balanced immune responses. However, most information regarding the role of accessory molecules in immune responses has been derived in the context of signals from the TCRs. Little understanding has been achieved regarding the consequence of ligation of costimulation molecules in absence of signals from the TCR. By employing an in vivo murine system, we show, herein, that ligation of CD28 alone with anti-CD28 Abs leads to a dramatic enlargement of the peripheral lymphoid organs characterized primarily by the expansion of B cells. B cells from anti-CD28-treated mice are resistant to spontaneous and anti-IgM-induced apoptosis. These cells are also unsusceptible to FasL-mediated apoptosis. Interestingly, this in vivo effect of CD28 on B cells is largely mediated by inducing the expression of CD40L, since coadministration of a blocking Ab against CD40L inhibited CD28-mediated B cell survival and expansion. Therefore, CD28-mediated expression of CD40L may play an important role in the regulation of lymphocyte homeostasis.  相似文献   

6.
7.
T cell activation requires Ag-specific stimulation mediated by the TCR as well as an additional stimulus provided by Ag presenting cells. On human T cells, it has been shown that antibodies to the Ag CD28 can provide a potent amplification signal for cytokine production and proliferation. Here we describe the production of a mAb to the murine homologue of CD28, and the use of this antibody to examine the function and distribution of CD28 in the mouse. Anti-murine CD28 synergizes with TCR-mediated signals to greatly enhance lymphokine production and proliferation of T cells, and the CD28 signal is not blocked by cyclosporin A. In the peripheral lymphoid organs and in the blood of the mouse, all CD4+ and CD8+ T cells express CD28. In the thymus, CD28 expression is highest on immature CD3-, CD8+ and CD4+8+ cells, and on CD4-8- cells that express alpha beta and tau delta TCR. The level of CD28 on mature CD4+ and CD8+ alpha beta TCR+ thymocytes is two- to fourfold lower than on the immature cells. The potent costimulatory function of CD28 on mature T cells, together with the high level of expression on CD4+8+ thymocytes, suggest that this costimulatory receptor might play an important role in T cell development and activation.  相似文献   

8.
The self-restricted T cell repertoire exhibits a high frequency of alloreactivity. Because these alloreactive T cells are derived from the pool of cells selected on several different self MHC alleles, it is unknown how development of the alloantigenic repertoire is influenced by homology between a self MHC allele and an alloantigen. To address this, we used the 2C transgenic TCR that is selected by K(b), is alloreactive for L(d), and cross-reacts with L(q). L(q) is highly homologous to L(d) and binds several of the same peptide ligands, including p2Ca, the peptide recognized by 2C. We find that L(d)/p2Ca is a high avidity agonist ligand, whereas L(q)/p2Ca is a low avidity agonist ligand for 2C T cells. When mice transgenic for the 2C TCR are bred to L(q)-expressing mice, 2C(+) T cells develop; however, they express lower levels of either the 2C TCR or CD8 and require a higher L(d)/p2Ca ligand density to be activated than 2C(+) T cells selected by K(b). Furthermore, the 2C T cells selected in the presence of L(q) fail to detect L(q)/p2Ca complexes even at high ligand density. Thus, despite possessing the identical TCR, there is a functional avidity difference between 2C(+) T cells selected in the presence of L(q) vs K(b). These data provide evidence that homology between the selecting ligand and an alloantigen can influence the avidity of the T cell repertoire for the alloantigen, and suggest that thymic selection can fine tune T cell avidity independent of intrinsic TCR affinity.  相似文献   

9.
Programmed death receptor 1 (PD-1) is expressed on thymocytes in addition to activated lymphocyte cells. Its ligation is thought to negatively regulate T cell activation, and PD-1(-/-) mice develop autoimmunity. To study the role of PD-1 on the development and function of a monoclonal CD8(+) T cell population, 2C TCR-transgenic/recombination-activating gene 2(-/-)/PD-1(-/-) mice were generated. Unexpectedly, approximately 30% of peripheral T cells in these mice were CD4/CD8 double negative (DN). Although the DN cells were not activated by Ag-expressing APCs, they functioned normally in response to anti-CD3/anti-CD28. These cells had a naive surface phenotype and lacked expression of NK1.1, B220, and gammadelta TCR; and the majority did not up-regulate CD8alphaalpha expression upon activation, arguing that they are not predominantly diverted gammadelta-lineage cells. The thymus was studied in detail to infer the mechanism of generation of DN peripheral T cells. Total thymus cellularity was reduced in 2C TCR-transgenic/recombination-activating gene 2(-/-)/PD-1(-/-) mice, and a relative increase in DN cells and decrease in double-positive (DP) cells were observed. Increased annexin V(+) cells among the DP population argued for augmented negative selection in PD-1(-/-) mice. In addition, an increased fraction of the DN thymocytes was HSA negative, suggesting that they had undergone positive selection. This possibility was supported by decreased emergence of DN PD-1(-/-) 2C cells in H-2(k) bone marrow chimera recipients. Our results are consistent with a model in which absence of PD-1 leads to greater negative selection of strongly interacting DP cells as well as increased emergence of DN alphabeta peripheral T cells.  相似文献   

10.
The role of B7 costimulation in CD4/CD8 T cell homeostasis   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The effect of B7-mediated costimulation on T cell homeostasis was examined in studies of B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86) transgenic as well as B7-deficient mice. B7 overexpression in transgenic mice resulted in marked polyclonal peripheral T cell hyperplasia accompanied by skewing toward an increased proportion of CD8 single-positive cells and a decreased proportion of CD4 single-positive cells in thymus and more markedly in peripheral T cells. B7-induced T cell expansion was dependent on both CD28 and TCR expression. Transgenic overexpression of B7-1 or B7-2 resulted in down-regulation of cell surface CD28 on thymocytes and peripheral T cells through a mechanism mediated by intercellular interaction. Mice deficient in B7-1 and B7-2 exhibited changes that were the reciprocal of those observed in B7-overexpressing transgenics: a marked increase in the CD4/CD8 ratio in peripheral T cells and an increase in cell surface CD28 in thymus and peripheral T cells. These reciprocal effects of genetically engineered increase or decrease in B7 expression indicate that B7 costimulation plays a physiological role in the regulation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell homeostasis.  相似文献   

11.
The positive and negative selection of immature thymocytes that shapes the mature T cell repertoire appears to occur at an intermediate stage of development when the cells express low levels of TCR/CD3. These cells are also CD4+CD8+ and CD28+ (dull), and signals delivered by these three accessory molecules have been implicated in the selection process. We have examined the regulatory function of these accessory molecules on responses of immature thymocytes stimulated through the TCR/CD3 complex. Cross-linking CD4 or CD8 with CD3 strongly enhanced signal transduction via CD3 as assessed by protein tyrosine phosphorylation and calcium mobilization. Subsequent cell proliferation could be induced by soluble anti-CD28 mAb, which was comitogenic for cells stimulated with CD3 x CD4 or CD3 x CD8 cross-linking, but was without effect on cells stimulated with CD3 x CD3 cross-linking. A potential role for CD28 signal transduction in thymic maturation is suggested by the demonstration that the BB-1 molecule, a natural ligand for CD28, is expressed on thymic stromal cells. Taken together, our data suggest a model of thymic development in which CD4 or CD8 may enhance TCR/CD3 signaling upon coligation by an MHC molecule. If the CD28 surface receptor is simultaneously stimulated by a BB-1 expressing stromal cell, this set of interactions could lead to proliferation and positive selection. In the absence of CD28 stimulation the enhanced TCR/CD3 signals might lead to apoptosis and negative selection.  相似文献   

12.
T cell receptor signaling in the thymus can result in positive selection, and hence progressive maturation to the CD4(+)8(-) or CD4(-)8(+) stage, or induction of apoptosis by negative selection. Although it is poorly understood how TCR ligation at the CD4(+)8(+) stage can lead to such different cell fates, it is thought that the strength of signal may play a role in determining the outcome of TCR signaling. In this study, we have characterized the formation of an active signaling complex in thymocytes undergoing positive selection as a result of interaction with thymic epithelial cells. Although this signaling complex involves redistribution of cell surface and intracellular molecules, reminiscent of that observed in T cell activation, accumulation of GM1-containing lipid rafts was not observed. However, enforced expression of the costimulatory molecule CD80 on thymic epithelium induced GM1 polarization in thymocytes, and was accompanied by reduced positive selection and increased apoptosis. We suggest that the presence or absence of CD80 costimulation influences the outcome of TCR signaling in CD4(+)8(+) thymocytes through differential lipid raft recruitment, thus determining overall signal strength and influencing developmental cell fate.  相似文献   

13.
CTLA-4 (CD152) engagement can down-regulate T cell activation and promote the induction of immune tolerance. However, the strategy of attenuating T cell activation by engaging CTLA-4 has been limited by sharing of its natural ligands with the costimulatory protein CD28. In the present study, a CTLA-4-specific single-chain Ab (scFv) was developed and expressed on the cell surface to promote selective engagement of this regulatory molecule. Transfectants expressing anti-CTLA-4 scFv at their surface bound soluble CTLA-4 but not soluble CD28. Coexpression of anti-CTLA-4 scFv with anti-CD3epsilon and anti-CD28 scFvs on artificial APCs reduced the proliferation and IL-2 production by resting and preactivated bulk T cells as well as CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets. Importantly, expression of anti-CTLA-4 scFv on the same cell surface as the TCR ligand was essential for the inhibitory effects of CTLA-4-specific ligation. CTLA-4-mediated inhibition of tyrosine phosphorylation of components of the proximal TCR signaling apparatus was similarly dependent on coexpression of TCR and CTLA-4 ligands on the same surface. These findings support a predominant role for CTLA-4 function in the modification of the proximal TCR signal. Using T cells from DO11.10 and 2C TCR transgenic mice, negative regulatory effects of selective CTLA-4 ligation were also demonstrated during the stimulation of Ag-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells by MHC/peptide complexes. Together these studies demonstrate that selective ligation of CTLA-4 using a membrane-bound scFv results in attenuated T cell responses only when coengaged with the TCR during T cell/APC interaction and define an approach to harnessing the immunomodulatory potential of CTLA-4-specific ligation.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the mechanism of selection of individual human CD8+ T cell clones into long-term memory following primary infection with a persistent human virus (human CMV (HCMV)), we undertook a longitudinal analysis of the diversity of T cell clones directed toward an immunodominant viral epitope: we followed this longitudinally from early T cell expansion through the contraction phase and selection into the memory pool. We show that following initial HCMV infection, the early primary response against a defined epitope was composed of diverse clones possessing many different TCR Vbeta segments. Longitudinal analysis showed that this usage rapidly focused predominantly on a single TCR Vbeta segment within which dominant clones frequently had public TCR usage, in contrast to subdominant or contracted clones. Longitudinal clonotypic analysis showed evidence of disproportionate contraction of certain clones that were abundant in the primary response, and late expansion of clones that were subdominant in the primary response. All dominant clones selected into memory showed similar high functional avidity of their TCR, whereas two clones that greatly contracted showed substantially lower avidity. Expression of the IL-7R is required for survival of murine effector CD8+ T cells into memory, but in primary HCMV infection IL-7R was not detected on circulating Ag-specific cells until memory had been established. Thus, the oligoclonal T cell repertoire against an immunodominant persistent viral epitope is established early in primary infection by the rapid selection of public clonotypes, rather than being a stochastic process.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, we suggest that CD8 levels on T cells are not static, but can change and, as a result, modulate CD8(+) T cell responses. We describe three models of CD8 modulation using novel weak-agonist (K1A) and super-agonist (C2A) altered peptide ligands of the HY smcy peptide. First, we used peripheral nonresponsive CD8(low) T cells produced after peripheral HY-D(b) MHC class I tetramer stimulation of female HY TCR transgenic and wild-type mice. Second, we used genetically lowered CD8(int) T cells from heterozygote CD8(+/0) mice. Finally, we used pre-existing nonresponsive CD8(low) T cells from male HY TCR transgenic mice. In CD8(low) and CD8(high) mice, presence of a lower level of CD8 greatly decreased the avidity of the peptide-MHC for HY TCR as reflected by avidity (K(D)) and dissociation constant (T(1/2)) measurements. All three models demonstrated that lowering CD8 levels resulted in the requirement for a higher avidity peptide-MHC interaction with the TCR to respond equivalently to unmanipulated CD8(high) T cells of the same specificity. Additionally, direct injections of wild-type HY-D(b) and C2A-D(b) tetramers into female HY TCR or female B6 mice induced a high frequency of peripheral nonresponsive CD8(low) T cells, yet C2A-D(b) was superior in inducing a primed CD8(+)CD44(+) memory population. The ability to dynamically modulate the size and responsiveness of an Ag-specific T cell pool by "CD8 tuning" of the T cell during the early phases of an immune response has important implications for the balance of responsiveness, memory, and tolerance.  相似文献   

16.
RasGRP1 and Sos are two Ras-guanyl-nucleotide exchange factors that link TCR signal transduction to Ras and MAPK activation. Recent studies demonstrate positive selection of developing thymocytes is crucially dependent on RasGRP1, whereas negative selection of autoreactive thymocytes appears to be RasGRP1 independent. However, the role of RasGRP1 in T regulatory (Treg) cell development and function is unknown. In this study, we characterized the development and function of CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) and CD8(+)CD44(high)CD122(+) Treg lineages in RasGRP1(-/-) mice. Despite impaired CD4 Treg cell development in the thymus, the periphery of RasGRP1(-/-) mice contained significantly increased frequencies of CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg cells that possessed a more activated cell surface phenotype. Furthermore, on a per cell basis, CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg cells from mutant mice are more suppressive than their wild-type counterparts. Our data also suggest that the lymphopenic environment in the mutant mice plays a dominant role of favored peripheral development of CD4 Treg cells. These studies suggest that whereas RasGRP1 is crucial for the intrathymic development of CD4 Treg cells, it is not required for their peripheral expansion and function. By contrast to CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) T cells, intrathymic development of CD8(+)CD44(high)CD122(+) Treg cells is unaffected by the RasGRP1(-/-) mutation. Moreover, RasGRP1(-/-) mice contained greater numbers of CD8(+)CD44(high)CD122(+) T cells in the spleen, relative to wild-type mice. Activated CD8 Treg cells from RasGRP1(-/-) mice retained their ability to synthesize IL-10 and suppress the proliferation of wild-type CD8(+)CD122(-) T cells, albeit at a much lower efficiency than wild-type CD8 Treg cells.  相似文献   

17.
The antigen T cell receptor (TCR)-CD3 complexes present on the cell surface of CD4(+) T lymphocytes and T cell lines express CD3 epsilon chain isoforms with different isoelectric points (pI), with important structural and functional consequences. The pI values of the isoforms fit the predicted pI values of CD3 epsilon chains lacking one, two, and three negatively charged amino acid residues present in the N-terminal region. Different T cells have different ratios of CD3 epsilon chain isoforms. At a high pI, degraded CD3 epsilon isoforms can be better recognized by certain anti-CD3 monoclonal antibodies such as YCD3-1, the ability of which to bind to the TCR-CD3 complex is directly correlated with the pI of CD3 epsilon. The abundance of CD3 epsilon isoforms can be modified by treatment of T cells with the proteinase inhibitor phenanthroline. In addition, these CD3 epsilon isoforms have functional importance. This is shown, first, by the different structure of TCR-CD3 complexes in cells possessing different amounts of isoforms (as observed in surface biotinylation experiments), by their different antigen responses, and by the stronger interaction between low pI CD3 epsilon isoforms and the TCR. Second, incubation of cells with phenanthroline diminished the proportion of degraded high pI CD3 epsilon isoforms, but also the ability of the cells to deliver early TCR activation signals. Third, cells expressing mutant CD3 epsilon chains lacking N-terminal acid residues showed facilitated recognition by antibody YCD3-1 and enhanced TCR-mediated activation. Furthermore, the binding avidity of antibody YCD3-1 was different in distinct thymus populations. These results suggest that changes in CD3 epsilon N-terminal chains might help to fine-tune the response of the TCR to its ligands in distinct activation situations or in thymus selection.  相似文献   

18.
The TCR complex, when isolated from thymocytes and peripheral T cells, contains a constitutively tyrosine-phosphorylated CD3zeta molecule termed p21. Previous investigations have shown that the constitutive phosphorylation of CD3zeta results from TCR interactions with MHC molecules occurring in both the thymus and the periphery. To determine what contribution the selection environment had on this constitutive phosphorylation, we analyzed CD3zeta from several distinct class I- and II-restricted TCR-transgenic mice where thymocyte development occurred in either a selecting or a nonselecting MHC environment. Herein, we report that constitutively phosphorylated CD3zeta (p21) was present in thymocytes that developed under nonselecting peptide-MHC conditions. These findings strongly support the model that the TCR has an inherent avidity for MHC molecules before repertoire selection. Biochemical analyses of the TCR complex before and after TCR stimulation suggested that the constitutively phosphorylated CD3zeta subunit did not contribute to de novo TCR signals. These findings may have important implications for T cell functions during self-MHC recognition under normal and autoimmune circumstances.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of alloreactive CD4 T cells occurs via the direct and indirect pathways of alloantigen presentation. A novel TCR/alloantigen transgenic system was designed that permitted in vivo visualization of CD4 T cell priming through these pathways. When both pathways of alloantigen presentation were intact, CD4 T cell activation in response to cardiac allografts was rapid and systemic by day 4 after transplantation, in contrast to that seen in response to skin allografts, which was delayed until 10-12 days after transplantation. Despite this systemic CD4 T cell activation in response to cardiac allografts, there was a paucity of activated graft-infiltrating CD4 T cells at 4 days posttransplantation. This finding suggests that the initial priming of alloimmune CD4 T cell responses occurs within draining lymphoid organs. Furthermore, alloantigens derived from cardiac allografts failed to promote thymic negative selection of developing thymocytes expressing the alloreactive TCR clonotype. In the absence of a functional direct pathway, the kinetics of activation, anatomic localization, and effector function of alloreactive CD4 T cells remained unchanged. Overall, the present study defines the anatomic and temporal characteristics of CD4 T cell alloimmune responses and demonstrates that CD4 T cell priming via the indirect pathway proceeds optimally in the absence of the direct pathway of alloantigen presentation.  相似文献   

20.
The goal of adoptive T cell therapy in cancer is to provide effective antitumor immunity by transfer of selected populations of tumor Ag-specific T cells. Transfer of T cells with high TCR avidity is critical for in vivo efficacy. In this study, we demonstrate that fluorescent peptide/MHC class I multimeric complexes incorporating mutations in the alpha3 domain (D227K/T228A) that abrogate binding to the CD8 coreceptor can be used to selectively isolate tumor Ag-specific T cells of high functional avidity from both in vitro expanded and ex vivo T cell populations. Sorting, cloning, and expansion of alpha3 domain mutant multimer-positive CD8 T cells enabled rapid selection of high avidity tumor-reactive T cell clones. Our results are relevant for ex vivo identification and isolation of T cells with potent antitumor activity for adoptive T cell therapy.  相似文献   

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