Does T-cell tolerance require a dedicated antigen-presenting cell?
- 1 March 1989
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 338 (6210) , 74-76
- https://doi.org/10.1038/338074a0
Abstract
Almost 30 years ago Burnet proposed that the immune system maintained self-tolerance by deleting autoreactive lymphocytes. Recently it has become clear that for T cells this step occurs in the thymus, where developing T cells first express their antigen-specific receptors. Here a T-cell which encounters its antigen disappears--if it is not dead, it at least stops expressing its receptors. In the periphery by contrast, encounter with antigen leads to activation and proliferation of the responding T-cell. There are two possible explanations for this difference. Either the antigen-presenting cells in the thymus are different from those in the periphery and instead of producing positive signals they directly or indirectly kill the thymocytes; or the T cells themselves are different, and like immature B cells, may die after encounter with antigen. We tested the first possibility and found that dendritic cells from spleen, which are the most potent activators of mature T cells, are also the most potent inactivators of young developing T cells. Thus it is not the antigen-presenting cell which determines whether a T-cell responds or dies, but the T-cell itself or its thymic environment.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Split tolerance induced by the intrathymic adoptive transfer of thymocyte stem cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1988
- Expression of T-cell antigen receptor genes during fetal development in the thymusNature, 1985
- STUDIES OF THE ROLE OF THE THYMIC ENVIRONMENT IN THE INDUCTION OF TOLERANCE TO MHC ANTIGENSTransplantation, 1985
- Antigen specific suppression of T-cell responses — the veto conceptImmunology Today, 1985
- Is immunological tolerance (non-responsiveness) a consequence of interleukin 2 deficit during the recognition of antigen?Immunology Today, 1984
- Thymic cytotoxic T lymphocytes are primed in vivo to minor histocompatibility antigens.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1984
- Bone marrow origin of Ia-positive cells in the medulla rat thymus.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1981
- An immunological suppressor cell inactivating cytotoxic T-lymphocyte precursor cells recognizing itNature, 1980
- Is self tolerance H–2 restricted?Nature, 1980
- Rejection of Skin Allografts by Radiation Chimaeras: Selective Gene Action in the Specification of Cell Surface StructureNature, 1970