| Literature DB >> 25284152 |
Ondrej Stepanek1, Arvind S Prabhakar2, Celine Osswald3, Carolyn G King3, Anna Bulek4, Dieter Naeher3, Marina Beaufils-Hugot3, Michael L Abanto3, Virginie Galati3, Barbara Hausmann3, Rosemarie Lang3, David K Cole4, Eric S Huseby5, Andrew K Sewell4, Arup K Chakraborty6, Ed Palmer7.
Abstract
In the thymus, high-affinity, self-reactive thymocytes are eliminated from the pool of developing T cells, generating central tolerance. Here, we investigate how developing T cells measure self-antigen affinity. We show that very few CD4 or CD8 coreceptor molecules are coupled with the signal-initiating kinase, Lck. To initiate signaling, an antigen-engaged T cell receptor (TCR) scans multiple coreceptor molecules to find one that is coupled to Lck; this is the first and rate-limiting step in a kinetic proofreading chain of events that eventually leads to TCR triggering and negative selection. MHCII-restricted TCRs require a shorter antigen dwell time (0.2 s) to initiate negative selection compared to MHCI-restricted TCRs (0.9 s) because more CD4 coreceptors are Lck-loaded compared to CD8. We generated a model (Lck come&stay/signal duration) that accurately predicts the observed differences in antigen dwell-time thresholds used by MHCI- and MHCII-restricted thymocytes to initiate negative selection and generate self-tolerance.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25284152 PMCID: PMC4304671 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.08.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582