Affiliation:
1. Section of Immunobiology, Yale University Medical School, New Haven, CT 06510.
Abstract
Abstract
Injection of lymphoid cells expressing minor lymphocyte-stimulating antigen-1 (Mls-1a) induces tolerance to the superantigen, and partial deletion of Mls-1a-reactive T cells. We have identified a transient population of T cells that have lost the alpha/beta T cell receptor at the time when Mls-1a-reactive T cells start to disappear during the process of tolerance induction. Apoptosis was directly demonstrated in this TCR-alpha/beta negative T-cell population. This indicates a peripheral T-cell deletion pathway, characterized by TCR down-regulation, apoptosis, and clonal deletion. The consequence of Mls-1a-induced TCR down-regulation appears to be different in CD4+ cells and in CD8+ cells. Although most of the CD4+ cells that have lost TCR expressing alpha- and beta-chains appear to be undergoing apoptosis, many of their CD8+ counterparts may be able to re-express the Ag receptor. This argues for the involvement of coreceptors in the induction of apoptosis during peripheral deletion.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
5 articles.
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