Abstract
Negative selection of potentially autoreactive thymocytes occurs mainly in the thymus and is thought to be induced primarily by interaction with bone marrow-derived cells. However, some studies have also reported a role for radioresistant thymic cells, which are probably epithelial in origin, in the deletion of thymocytes reacting to endogenous superantigens. We have previously demonstrated that thymic epithelial cell lines could induce thymocyte-positive selection in vivo. In this study, we assessed the potential of these cells to delete thymocytes reacting to the staphylococcal enterotoxin A or B superantigens in vitro. In the presence of staphylococcal enterotoxin A or B we found that all thymic epithelial cell lines used in this study were capable of activating T cell hybrids or deleting CD4+CD8+ thymocytes expressing an appropriate TCR. The extent of superantigen-mediated thymocyte deletion mediated by thymic epithelial cell lines was comparable to that mediated by a thymic macrophage cell line. Similar results were obtained with three phenotypically distinct thymic cell lines, suggesting that the ability to induce thymocyte deletion might be a general feature of various subsets of thymic epithelium. The observations provided in this study, combined with our previous demonstration that the same thymic epithelial cell lines can participate in positive selection, suggest that a given stromal cell population might be capable of taking part both in positive and negative selection of thymocytes.
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CITATION STYLE
Hugo, P., Kappler, J. W., Godfrey, D. I., & Marrack, P. C. (1994). Thymic epithelial cell lines that mediate positive selection can also induce thymocyte clonal deletion. The Journal of Immunology, 152(3), 1022–1031. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.152.3.1022
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