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Maturational stage-dependent thymocyte responses to TCR engagement. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Thymocyte positive and negative selection in the thymus depends on the strength of T-cell receptor (TCR) signals, with strong signals leading to negative selection and weak signals leading to positive selection.
  • Researchers explored how the maturation stages of thymocytes influence their responses to different TCR signal strengths by studying them in a lab setting with thymic epithelial cells.
  • The findings suggest a complex selection process where initial low-avidity TCR interactions promote positive selection, while subsequent higher-avidity interactions determine whether the thymocyte undergoes full maturation or negative selection.

Article Abstract

Thymocyte positive and negative selection are dependent on avidity-driven TCR-mediated recognition events in the thymus. High-avidity recognition events result in negative selection, while low-avidity recognition events result in positive selection. However, it has not been established how thymocytes maturation stages affect their responses to TCR signals of different avidities. We gained insight into this question when we reduced thymocyte selection to an in vitro system, in which full maturation of developmentally synchronized immature double-positive thymocytes was induced on a cloned line of thymic epithelial cells. Our analysis of the kinetics of thymocyte development supports a multi-phasic model of thymic selection. In it, thymocyte maturation stages as well as interaction avidity control the outcome TCR stimulation. Positive selection is initiated during a primary recognition event that proceeds independently of the TCR avidity. During a secondary recognition event the final fate of thymocyte, full maturation versus negative selection, is determined by TCR avidity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eji.200425293DOI Listing

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