Prevalent Role of TCR α-Chain in the Selection of the Preimmune Repertoire Specific for a Human Tumor-Associated Self-Antigen

  • Dietrich P
  • Le Gal F
  • Dutoit V
  • et al.
68Citations
Citations of this article
41Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The specificity of recognition of pMHC complexes by T lymphocytes is determined by the V regions of the TCR α- and β-chains. Recent experimental evidence has suggested that Ag-specific TCR repertoires may exhibit a more Vα- than Vβ-restricted usage. Whether Vα usage is narrowed during immune responses to Ag or if, on the contrary, restricted Vα usage is already defined at the early stages of TCR repertoire selection, however, has remained unexplored. Here, we analyzed V and CDR3 TCR regions of single circulating naive T cells specifically detected ex vivo and isolated with HLA-A2/melan-A peptide multimers. Similarly to what was previously observed for melan-A-specific Ag-experienced T cells, we found a relatively wide Vβ usage, but a preferential Vα 2.1 usage. Restricted Vα 2.1 usage was also found among single CD8+ A2/melan-A multimer+ thymocytes, indicating that Vα-restricted selection takes place in the thymus. Vα 2.1 usage, however, was independent from functional avidity of Ag recognition. Thus, interaction of the pMHC complex with selected Vα-chains contributes to set the broad Ag specificity, as underlined by preferential binding of A2/melan-A multimers to Vα 2.1-bearing TCRs, whereas functional outcomes result from the sum of these with other interactions between pMHC complex and TCR.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Dietrich, P.-Y., Le Gal, F.-A., Dutoit, V., Pittet, M. J., Trautman, L., Zippelius, A., … Valmori, D. (2003). Prevalent Role of TCR α-Chain in the Selection of the Preimmune Repertoire Specific for a Human Tumor-Associated Self-Antigen. The Journal of Immunology, 170(10), 5103–5109. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.170.10.5103

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free