On the complexity of self

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Abstract

SELF peptides bound to self major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules have been implicated both in positive1,2 and in negative3,4 selection of T cells during intrathymic development. We report here that the novel MHC-restricted monoclonal antibody Y-Ae (ref. 5) detects the MHC class II bound form of a major self peptide6. Y-Ae binds ∼12% of the relevant MHC class II molecules on self antigen presenting cells. The peptide detected by Y-Ae is one of several major peptides eluted from the MHC molecule6. These data suggest that self peptides presented by self MHC class II molecules at densities sufficient to signal a CD4 T cell are of very limited complexity. Furthermore, as Y-Ae stains antigen presenting cells that mediate negative selection but not thymic cortical epithelial cells5 that drive positive selection3, differential expression of self peptide:self MHC class II complexes may be a key feature of intrathymic selection. © 1991 Nature Publishing Group.

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Rudensky, A. Y., Rath, S., Preston-Hurlburt, P., Murphy, D. B., & Janeway, C. A. (1991). On the complexity of self. Nature, 353(6345), 660–662. https://doi.org/10.1038/353660a0

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