Altered peptide ligands can control CD4 T lymphocyte differentiation in vivo.

C Pfeiffer, J Stein, S Southwood, H Ketelaar… - The Journal of …, 1995 - rupress.org
C Pfeiffer, J Stein, S Southwood, H Ketelaar, A Sette, K Bottomly
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1995rupress.org
Antigen priming of naive CD4 T cells can generate effector CD4 T cells that produce
interleukin 4 (T helper [Th] 2-like) or interferon-gamma (Th1-like). Using a system in which
priming leads to responses dominated by one or the other of these cell types, we show that
varying either the antigenic peptide or the major histocompatibility complex class II molecule
can determine whether Th1-like or Th2-like responses are obtained. Our results show that
peptide/major histocompatibility complex class II complexes that interact strongly with the T …
Antigen priming of naive CD4 T cells can generate effector CD4 T cells that produce interleukin 4 (T helper [Th]2-like) or interferon-gamma (Th1-like). Using a system in which priming leads to responses dominated by one or the other of these cell types, we show that varying either the antigenic peptide or the major histocompatibility complex class II molecule can determine whether Th1-like or Th2-like responses are obtained. Our results show that peptide/major histocompatibility complex class II complexes that interact strongly with the T cell receptor favor generation of Th1-like cells, while those that bind weakly favor priming of Th2-like T cells. Thus, signals from the T cell receptor can influence the differentiation of CD4 T cells into specific types of effector cells.
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