| Literature DB >> 28783686 |
Greet Verstichel1, David Vermijlen2,3, Liesbet Martens4, Glenn Goetgeluk1, Margreet Brouwer3, Nicolas Thiault5, Yasmine Van Caeneghem1, Stijn De Munter1, Karin Weening1, Sarah Bonte1, Georges Leclercq1, Tom Taghon1, Tessa Kerre1, Yvan Saeys4,6, Jo Van Dorpe7, Hilde Cheroutre5, Bart Vandekerckhove8.
Abstract
The thymus plays a central role in self-tolerance, partly by eliminating precursors with a T cell receptor (TCR) that binds strongly to self-antigens. However, the generation of self-agonist-selected lineages also relies on strong TCR signaling. How thymocytes discriminate between these opposite outcomes remains elusive. Here, we identified a human agonist-selected PD-1+ CD8αα+ subset of mature CD8αβ+ T cells that displays an effector phenotype associated with agonist selection. TCR stimulation of immature post-β-selection thymocyte blasts specifically gives rise to this innate subset and fixes early T cell receptor alpha variable (TRAV) and T cell receptor alpha joining (TRAJ) rearrangements in the TCR repertoire. These findings suggest that the checkpoint for agonist selection precedes conventional selection in the human thymus.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28783686 PMCID: PMC5569900 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.aah4232
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Immunol ISSN: 2470-9468