Autoreactive T Cells Escape Clonal Deletion in the Thymus by a CD24-Dependent Pathway

  • Carl J
  • Liu J
  • Joshi P
  • et al.
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Abstract

Despite negative selection in the thymus, significant numbers of autoreactive T cells still escape to the periphery and cause autoimmune diseases when immune regulation goes awry. It is largely unknown how these T cells escape clonal deletion. In this study, we report that CD24 deficiency caused deletion of autoreactive T cells that normally escape negative selection. Restoration of CD24 expression on T cells alone did not prevent autoreactive T cells from deletion; bone marrow chimera experiments suggest that CD24 on radio-resistant stromal cells is necessary for preventing deletion of autoreactive T cells. CD24 deficiency abrogated the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in transgenic mice with a TCR specific for a pathogenic autoantigen. The role of CD24 in negative selection provides a novel explanation for its control of genetic susceptibility to autoimmune diseases in mice and humans.

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Carl, J. W., Liu, J.-Q., Joshi, P. S., El-Omrani, H. Y., Yin, L., Zheng, X., … Bai, X.-F. (2008). Autoreactive T Cells Escape Clonal Deletion in the Thymus by a CD24-Dependent Pathway. The Journal of Immunology, 181(1), 320–328. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.181.1.320

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