The Role of Self Peptides in the Allogeneic Cross-reactivity of CTLs
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This study presents data relevant to understanding the molecular and structural basis for the cross-reactivity of many CTLs on multiple MHC targets. Five anti-H-2Kb alloreactive CTL clones derived from B6.C-H-2bm1 (bm1), B6.C-H-2bm8 (bm8), and B6.C-H-2bm11 (bm11) mice and a Sendai virus-specific H-2Kb-restricted CTL clone were studied. Self peptides extracted from Kb molecules were fractionated by HPLC and tested for their ability to be recognized on RMA/s (H-2b) cells by those clones. For each alloreactive clone, a single dominant peptide peak was found to sensitize target cells. In addition to recognizing peptides presented by the Kb molecule, the five alloreactive clones and the one Sendai virus-specific clone all showed cross-reactivities on a panel of Kbm mutant cells in a peptide-dependent manner. Two CTL clones, one alloreactive and one virus specific, cross-recognized Kbm targets by each responding to a unique self peptide in the context of the mutant MHC molecules. Our data underscore the prevalent idea that TCR-alpha beta have an inherent structural capability to react with several peptide/MHC structural patterns other than the original peptide/MHC pattern that might have been used to select that TCR. The high incidence of cross-reactivity seems to reflect a feature of the mechanism of positive selection in the thymus and the need for T cells in the repertoire to have an expanded capability for responding to a wide variety of foreign Ags.
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