Litcius/Paper detail

The partitioning of TCR repertoires by thymic selection

Wan‐Lin Lo, Eric S. Huseby

2024The Journal of Experimental Medicine14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

αβ T cells are critical components of the adaptive immune system; they maintain tissue and immune homeostasis during health, provide sterilizing immunity after pathogen infection, and are capable of eliminating transformed tumor cells. Fundamental to these distinct functions is the ligand specificity of the unique antigen receptor expressed on each mature T cell (TCR), which endows lymphocytes with the ability to behave in a cell-autonomous, disease context-specific manner. Clone-specific behavioral properties are initially established during T cell development when thymocytes use TCR recognition of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and MHC-like ligands to instruct survival versus death and to differentiate into a plethora of inflammatory and regulatory T cell lineages. Here, we review the ligand specificity of the preselection thymocyte repertoire and argue that developmental stage-specific alterations in TCR signaling control cross-reactivity and foreign versus self-specificity of T cell sublineages.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyT-cell receptorMajor histocompatibility complexContext (archaeology)ThymocyteImmune systemT cellclone (Java method)ImmunologyAcquired immune systemCell biologyRepertoireGeneticsGeneAcousticsPaleontologyPhysicsT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmunotherapy and Immune Responses