Proteasomes shape the repertoire of T cells participating in antigen-specific immune responses

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Abstract

Differences in the cleavage specificities of constitutive proteasomes and immunoproteasomes significantly affect the generation of MHC class I ligands and therefore the activation of CD8-positive T cells. Based on these findings, we investigated whether proteasomal specificity also influences CD8-positive T cells during thymic selection by peptides derived from self proteins. We find that one of the self peptides responsible for positive selection of ovalbumin-specific OT-1 T cells, which is derived from the f-actin capping protein (Cpα1), is efficiently generated only by immunoproteasomes. Furthermore, OT-1 mice backcrossed onto low molecular mass protein 7 (LMP7)-deficient mice show a 50% reduction of OT-1 cells. This deficiency is also observed after transfer of BM from OT-1 mice in LMP7-deficient mice and can be corrected by the injection of the Cpα1 peptide. Interestingly, WT and LMP7-deficient mice mount comparable immune responses to the ovalbumin-derived epitope SIINFEKL. However, their cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) differ in the use of T cell receptor Vβ genes. CTL derived from WT mice use Vβ8 or Vβ5 (the latter is also used by OT-1 cells), whereas SIINFEKL-specific CTL from LMP7-deficient mice are exclusively Vβ8-positive. Taken together, our experiments provide strong evidence that proteasomal specificity shapes the repertoire of T cells participating in antigen-specific immune responses. © 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.

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Osterloh, P., Linkemann, K., Tenzer, S., Rammensee, H. G., Radsak, M. P., Busch, D. H., & Schild, H. (2006). Proteasomes shape the repertoire of T cells participating in antigen-specific immune responses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 103(13), 5042–5047. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0509256103

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