Selection and fine-tuning of the autoimmune T-cell repertoire
- 1 July 2002
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Reviews Immunology
- Vol. 2 (7) , 487-498
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nri842
Abstract
The immune system must avoid aggressive T-cell responses against self-antigens. But, paradoxically, exposure to self-peptides seems to have an important role in positive selection in the thymus and the maintenance of a broad T-cell repertoire in the periphery. Recent experiments have highlighted situations that allow high-avidity self-reactive T cells to avoid negative selection in the thymus. Accumulating evidence indicates that other, non-deleting mechanisms control the avidity with which T cells recognize self-antigens--a phenomenon that is known as 'tuning'. This might maximize the peripheral T-cell repertoire by allowing the survival of T cells that can respond to self, but only at concentrations that are not normally reached in vivo.Keywords
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