Affiliation:
1. *Experimental Immunology Branch and
2. †Laboratory of Immune Cell Biology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892
Abstract
AbstractSelection processes in the thymus eliminate nonfunctional or harmful T cells and allow the survival of those cells with the potential to recognize Ag in association with self-MHC-encoded molecules (Ag/MHC). We have previously demonstrated that thymus-derived glucocorticoids antagonize TCR-mediated deletion, suggesting a role for endogenous thymic glucocorticoids in promoting survival of thymocytes following TCR engagement. Consistent with this hypothesis, we now show that inhibition of thymus glucocorticoid biosynthesis causes an increase in thymocyte apoptosis and a decrease in recovery that are directly proportional to the number of MHC-encoded molecules present and, therefore, the number of ligands available for TCR recognition. Expression of CD5 on CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, an indicator of TCR-mediated activation, increased in a TCR- and MHC-dependent manner when corticosteroid production or responsiveness was decreased. These results indicate that thymus-derived glucocorticoids determine where the window of thymocyte selection occurs in the TCR avidity spectrum by dampening the biological consequences of TCR occupancy and reveal that glucocorticoids mask the high percentage of self-Ag/MHC-reactive thymocytes that exist in the preselection repertoire.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Reference39 articles.
1. Sprent, J., D. Lo, E.-K. Gao, Y. Ron. 1988. T cell selection in the thymus. Immunol. Rev. 101: 172
2. Schwartz, R. H.. 1989. Acquisition of immunologic self-tolerance. Cell 57: 1073
3. King, L. B., M. S. Vacchio, K. Dixon, R. Hunziker, D. H. Margulies, J. D. Ashwell. 1995. A targeted glucocorticoid receptor antisense transgene increases thymocyte apoptosis and alters thymocyte development. Immunity 3: 647
4. Haynes, R. C., Jr. 1990. Adrenocorticotropic hormone; adrenocortical steroids and their synthetic analogs; inhibitors of the synthesis and actions of adrenocortical hormones. A. G. Gilman, Jr, and T. W. Rall, Jr, and A. S. Nies, Jr, and P. Taylor, Jr, eds. The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics 1431 Pergamon Press, New York.
5. Vacchio, M. S., V. Papadopoulos, J. D. Ashwell. 1994. Steroid production in the thymus: implications for thymocyte selection. J. Exp. Med. 179: 1835
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献