The duration of antigen receptor signalling determines CD4+ versus CD8+ T-cell lineage fate

K Yasutomo, C Doyle, L Miele, RN Germain - Nature, 2000 - nature.com
K Yasutomo, C Doyle, L Miele, RN Germain
Nature, 2000nature.com
Signals elicited by binding of the T-cell antigen receptor and the CD4/CD8 co-receptor to
major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules control the generation of CD4+ (helper)
or CD8+ (cytotoxic) T cells from thymic precursors that initially express both co-receptor
proteins. These precursors have unique, clonally distributed T-cell receptors with
unpredictable specificity for the self-MHC molecules involved in this differentiation process.
However, the mature T cells that emerge express only the CD4 (MHC class II-binding) or …
Abstract
Signals elicited by binding of the T-cell antigen receptor and the CD4/CD8 co-receptor to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules control the generation of CD4+ (helper) or CD8+ (cytotoxic) T cells from thymic precursors that initially express both co-receptor proteins. These precursors have unique, clonally distributed T-cell receptors with unpredictable specificity for the self-MHC molecules involved in this differentiation process. However, the mature T cells that emerge express only the CD4 (MHC class II-binding) or CD8 (MHC class I-binding) co-receptor that complements the MHC class-specificity of the T-cell receptor. How this matching of co-receptor-defined lineage and T-cell-receptor specificity is achieved remains unknown,,, as does whether signalling by the T-cell receptors, co-receptors and/or general cell-fate regulators such as Notch-1 (refs , ) contributes to initial lineage choice, to subsequent differentiation processes or to both. Here we show that the CD4 versus CD8 lineage fate of immature thymocytes is controlled by the co-receptor-influenced duration of initial T-cell receptor-dependent signalling. Notch-1 does not appear to be essential for this fate determination, but it is selectively required for CD8+ T-cell maturation after commitment directed by T-cell receptors. This indicates that the signals constraining CD4 versus CD8 lineage decisions are distinct from those that support subsequent differentiation events such as silencing of co-receptor loci.
nature.com