T cell receptor targeting to thymic cortical epithelial cells in vivo induces survival,activation and differentiation of immature thymocytes |
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Authors: | Klaus-Peter Mü ller,Bruno A. Kyewski |
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Abstract: | We report that targeting of T cell receptors (TcR) to non-major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules on thymic cortical epithelial cells by hybrid antibodies in vivo and in fetal thymic organ cultures results in phenotypic and functional differentiation of thymocytes. A single pulse with hybrid antibodies rescues immature, CD4/8 double-positive thymocytes from their programmed death in vivo, induces expression of the early activation antigen CD69 followed by TcR up-regulation, concomitant down-regulation of CD8 or CD4 and their conversion to functional mature T cells by day 3. This temporal sequence of maturation only affects small thymocytes without co-induction of blastogenesis. TcR targeting to MHC class II-positive epithelial cells predominantly induces CD4-positive T cells. This generation of CD4 single-positive T cells occurs also in MHC class II-deficient mice and thus is independent of CD4-MHC class II interactions. Moreover, in the presence of a specific deleting antigen (Mls 1a),TcR targeting results in transient activation of immature thymocytes, however, not in subsequent TcR (Vβ6) up-regulation and development of single-positive T cells. Our findings imply that TcR cross-linking to cortical epithelial cells is sufficient to confer a differentiation signal to immature thymocytes. Futhermore, this approach distinguishes two independent TcR-mediated intrathymic events: activation and subsequent deletion of the same thymocyte subset. |
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Keywords: | T cell differentiation Positive selection Bispecific hybrid antibodies |
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