Degenerate recognition of a dissimilar antigenic peptide by myelin basic protein-reactive T cells. Implications for thymic education and autoimmunity.

V Bhardwaj, V Kumar, HM Geysen… - Journal of immunology …, 1993 - journals.aai.org
V Bhardwaj, V Kumar, HM Geysen, EE Sercarz
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950), 1993journals.aai.org
The key event in the induction of an immune response is the recognition by a T lymphocyte
of an antigenic peptide bound to a MHC molecule. In the absence of structural coordinates
of the TCR and class II MHC molecules, various models of T cell recognition have been
proposed, with the emerging dogma that T cell recognition is exquisitely specific. We show
here that T cell clones specific for the N-terminal fragment of myelin basic protein, acetylated
Ac1-11, recognize a set of unrelated peptides in the context of the same I-Au molecule …
Abstract
The key event in the induction of an immune response is the recognition by a T lymphocyte of an antigenic peptide bound to a MHC molecule. In the absence of structural coordinates of the TCR and class II MHC molecules, various models of T cell recognition have been proposed, with the emerging dogma that T cell recognition is exquisitely specific. We show here that T cell clones specific for the N-terminal fragment of myelin basic protein, acetylated Ac1-11, recognize a set of unrelated peptides in the context of the same I-Au molecule. Moreover, immunization with the peptide mimic is sufficiently cross-reactive with Ac1-9 to either induce the Ac1-9-reactive clones or to induce tolerance as well as protection against Ac1-9-induced EAE. This observed degeneracy in T cell recognition has important implications for thymic selection and induction of autoimmune disease states by "molecular mimicry."
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