Abstract
We have used a TCR β-chain transgenic mouse to examine the relationship between the ability of a T cell to bind soluble class I-peptide complexes and its response to antigenic stimulation in vivo. T cells from gBT-I.3β TCR β-chain transgenic mice preferentially carried TCR α-chains bearing the same Vα2 V region as found in the parent receptor specific for an immunodominant HSV-1 gB-peptide. Furthermore, CD8+ T cells from these mice bound Kb- gB tetrameric complexes with relatively high frequency, and most of these cells contained a Vα2 TCR α-chain. Detailed sequence analysis of the tetramer-binding peripheral T cells showed that this was a heterogenous population expressing TCR with only partial sequence similarity to the parent receptor, which took the form of preferential inclusion of the parental Jα 16 element. Infection with HSV-1, however, selected a subset of tetramer-positive T cells. This was based on the emergence of a co-dominant Jα usage and selection of a restricted CDR3α length. Therefore, the ability to bind soluble MHC-peptide complexes does not always correlate with the ability of a T cell to respond to its cognate antigen after in vivo stimulation.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Coles, R. M., Jones, C. M., Brooks, A. G., Cameron, P. U., Heath, W. R., & Carbone, F. R. (2003). Virus infection expands a biased subset of T cells that bind tetrameric class I peptide complexes. European Journal of Immunology, 33(6), 1557–1567. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.200323715
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.