Positive and negative selection of the T cell repertoire: what thymocytes see (and don't see)

L Klein, B Kyewski, PM Allen… - Nature Reviews …, 2014 - nature.com
L Klein, B Kyewski, PM Allen, KA Hogquist
Nature Reviews Immunology, 2014nature.com
The fate of developing T cells is specified by the interaction of their antigen receptors with
self-peptide–MHC complexes that are displayed by thymic antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
Various subsets of thymic APCs are strategically positioned in particular thymic
microenvironments and they coordinate the selection of a functional and self-tolerant T cell
repertoire. In this Review, we discuss the different strategies that these APCs use to sample
and process self antigens and to thereby generate partly unique,'idiosyncratic'peptide–MHC …
Abstract
The fate of developing T cells is specified by the interaction of their antigen receptors with self-peptide–MHC complexes that are displayed by thymic antigen-presenting cells (APCs). Various subsets of thymic APCs are strategically positioned in particular thymic microenvironments and they coordinate the selection of a functional and self-tolerant T cell repertoire. In this Review, we discuss the different strategies that these APCs use to sample and process self antigens and to thereby generate partly unique, 'idiosyncratic' peptide–MHC ligandomes. We discuss how the particular composition of the peptide–MHC ligandomes that are presented by specific APC subsets not only shapes the T cell repertoire in the thymus but may also indelibly imprint the behaviour of mature T cells in the periphery.
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