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Central tolerance: good but imperfect

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IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS
卷 209, 期 -, 页码 290-296

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.0105-2896.2006.00348.x

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T-cell development is a highly coordinated process that depends on interactions between thymocytes, thymic epithelium, and bone marrow (BM)-derived dendritic cells (DCs). Before entering the peripheral T-cell pool, thymocytes are subject to negative selection, a process that eliminates (or deletes) T cells with high affinity toward self-antigens and therefore promotes self-tolerance. These self-antigens include those that are broadly expressed ubiquitous antigens and those whose expression is restricted to a few tissues, tissue-specific antigens (TSAs). Expression of TSAs in the thymus is mostly a property of medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs), and because these cells may be less capable than BM-derived DCs at mediating negative selection to ubiquitous antigens, we investigated the roles of both of these cell types in tolerance to TSAs. Here, we review our studies in which we found that mTECs were competent mediators of negative selection to a subset of TSA-reactive T cells, while thymic DCs extend the range of TSA-reactive T cells that undergo negative selection by capturing TSAs from mTECs. In addition, we recently investigated the efficiency of central tolerance to TSA during ontogeny, and we report that this process was less efficient in neonates than adult animals.

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