Negative selection is designed to purge the immune system of high-avidity, self-reactive T cells and thereby protect the host from overt autoimmunity. In this in vivo viral infection model, we show that there is a previously unappreciated dichotomy involved in negative selection in which high-avidity CD8+ T cells specific for a dominant epitope are eliminated, whereas T cells specific for a subdominant epitope on the same protein preferentially escape deletion. Although this resulted in significant skewing of immunodominance and a substantial depletion of the most promiscuous T cells, thymic and/or peripheral deletion of high-avidity CD8+ T cells was not accompanied by any major change in the TCR Vβ gene family usage or an absolute deletion of a single preferred complementarity-determining region 3 length polymorphism. This suggests that negative selection allows high-avidity CD8+ T cells specific for subdominant or cryptic epitopes to persist while effectively deleting high-avidity T cells specific for dominant epitopes. By allowing the escape of subdominant T cells, this process still preserves a relatively broad peripheral TCR repertoire that can actively participate in antiviral and/or autoreactive immune responses.
CITATION STYLE
Slifka, M. K., Blattman, J. N., Sourdive, D. J. D., Liu, F., Huffman, D. L., Wolfe, T., … von Herrath, M. G. (2003). Preferential Escape of Subdominant CD8+ T Cells During Negative Selection Results in an Altered Antiviral T Cell Hierarchy. The Journal of Immunology, 170(3), 1231–1239. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.170.3.1231
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