| Literature DB >> 20495070 |
Joshua D Milner1, Nicolas Fazilleau, Michael McHeyzer-Williams, William Paul.
Abstract
Priming of naive monoclonal CD4 T cells via weak agonsim permits GATA-3 transcription and Th2 differentiation. To test whether this process can occur in polyclonal naive populations, where a range of TCR affinities exists for any given Ag/MHC complex, we primed naive CD4 cells from 5CC7 Vbeta3 transgenic mice, which have a fixed beta-chain specific for pigeon cytochrome c peptide I-Ek. Priming populations de-pleted of higher affinity, moth cytochrome c pep-tide I-Ek tetramer-binding cells resulted in substantial IL-4 production that did not occur in the presence of higher affinity cells. TCRalpha-chain sequence analysis showed that clones that possessed TCR features associated with high affinity responses to pigeon cytochrome c made less IL-4 than clones that possessed fewer such motifs. These results indicate that cells bearing TCRs that are weakly stimulated by their cognate Ag preferentially adopt a Th2 phenotype when primed in the absence of competition from cells with higher affinity receptors.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20495070 PMCID: PMC2930602 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1000674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422