T Cell Development ll Flashcards
Describe the experiment that allowed researchers to know that TCR affinity is important for determining thymocyte fate
- research made use of cells from mice expressing transgenic TCR and a knock out of the TAP1 gene
- The OT-1 transgenic TCR binds H2K MHC-I with Ova peptides
- the TAP1 deficiency ensures that no endogenous peptides are presented on MHC-I molecules on the cell surface
- exogenous Ova peptides of varying specificity was added to the extracellular environment so MHC-I can bind Ova to stabilize itself on the cell surface
- the thymus of the transgenic and knockout mice was removed and grown on a medium where OT-1 peptides of intermediate or high affinity can be incorporated onto the surface of cells
- T cell development is examined
What was the experimental outcome of the OT-1 TCR transgenic and TAP1-deficient mice when exogenous Ova peptides of high and intermediate affinity were added, and a control where no peptide was added?
No peptide: no CD8+ T cells -> death by neglect
Intermediate affinity: positive CD8+ T cell selection -> survival and maturation
High affinity: negative CD8+ T cell selection -> clonal deletion
What models are there for how a DP cell becomes a SP cell (lineage commitment)?
- instructive
- stochastic
- others
note: these models are not mutually exclusive
Describe the instructive model of lineage commitment
- DP cells interact with cTECs expressing MHC-I and II + self peptides
- if TCR/CD8 recognize MHC-1 + self-peptides, cells are instructed to become CD8+ cells and downregulate CD4
- if TCR/CD4 recognize MHC-II + self-peptides, cells are instructed to become CD4+ cells and downregulate CD8
Describe the stochastic model of lineage commitment
- DP cells randomly down-regualte either CD4 or CD8
- if CD4 is down-regulated, cells become CD8+ cells IF their TCR/CD8 can bind to MHC-I + self-peptide
- if CD8 is down-regualted, cells become CD4+ cells IF their TCR/CD8 can bind to MHC-II + self-peptide
Where does negative selection occur in the thymus and which cells mediate this?
- cortex
- mediated by cTECs and DCs - medulla
- mediated by mTECs and DCs
Why are mTECs unusual cells, why are they important in negative selection?
have the ability to express proteins that are usually tissue restricted (e.g. insulin)
this allows T cells to be educated against tissue-specific Ag.s before they leave the thymus
What does expression of tissue-restricted Ag require, how does it do this?
Requires the epigenetic regulator AIRE which modified the chromatin
What is APECED - what protein is affected, what does this cause, what is the outcome?
Protein = AIRE (mutations in the AIRE gene)
causes = T cells reactive to tissue-restricted self-AGs are not deleted in the thymus
outcome = different autoimmunity phenotypes in different patients
What are some examples of different automimmune phenotypes caused by APECED?
- endocrine autoimmunity: hypoadrenalism, hypoparathyroidism, hypothyroidism
- type I diabetes
- autoimmunity in other organs
What are some examples of different automimmune phenotypes caused by APECED?
- endocrine autoimmunity: hypoadrenalism, hypoparathyroidism, hypothyroidism
- type I diabetes
- autoimmunity in other organs