4.8 Article

T Cell Receptor Cross-Reactivity between Similar Foreign and Self Peptides Influences Naive Cell Population Size and Autoimmunity

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 95-107

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2014.12.022

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Funding

  1. NIH [T32 GM008244, F30 DK093242, UL1 TR000114, R01 AI107020, R01 AI080275, R01 AI105816, R01 AI040996, R01 AI093553, P01 AI035296, R37 AI027998, R01 AI039614, R01 AI103760]
  2. William F. Milton Fund

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T cell receptor (TCR) cross-reactivity between major histocompatibility complex II (MHCII)-binding self and foreign peptides could influence the naive CD4(+) T cell repertoire and autoimmunity. We found that nonamer peptides that bind to the same MHCII molecule only need to share five amino acids to cross-react on the same TCR. This property was biologically relevant because systemic expression of a self peptide reduced the size of a naive cell population specific for a related foreign peptide by deletion of cells with cross-reactive TCRs. Reciprocally, an incompletely deleted naive T cell population specific for a tissue-restricted self peptide could be triggered by related microbial peptides to cause autoimmunity. Thus, TCR cross-reactivity between similar self and foreign peptides can reduce the size of certain foreign peptide-specific T cell populations and might allow T cell populations specific for tissue-restricted self peptides to cause autoimmunity after infection.

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