Abstract

Accumulating evidence indicates that regulatory T cells play a crucial role in preventing autoimmunity. To examine the processes by which regulatory CD4(+) T cells are produced during immune repertoire formation, we have developed transgenic mice that express the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) and coexpress major histocompatibility complex class II-restricted T cell receptors (TCRs) with varying affinities for the HA-derived CD4(+) T cell determinant S1. We show that interactions with a single self-peptide can induce thymocytes bearing an autoreactive TCR to undergo selection to become CD4(+) CD25(+) regulatory T cells, and that thymocytes bearing TCRs with low affinity for S1 do not undergo selection into this pathway. We show that CD4(+) thymocytes with identical specificity for the S1 self-peptide can undergo overt deletion versus abundant selection to become CD4(+) CD25(+) regulatory T cells in response to variations in expression of the S1 self-peptide in different lineages of HA transgenic mice. We also show that CD4(+) CD25(+) T cells proliferate in response to their selecting self-peptide in the periphery. Moreover, they do not proliferate in response to lymphopenia in the absence of the selecting self-peptide, reflecting a low level of expression of the high-affinity receptor for IL-7 (CD127) relative to conventional CD4(+) T cells. These studies are determining how specificity for self-peptides directs the thymic selection and peripheral expansion of CD4(+) CD25(+) regulatory T cells. Moreover, the differing responsiveness of CD4(+) CD25(+) regulatory T cells to cytokine- versus self-peptide-mediated signals may direct their accumulation to sites where the self-peptide is expressed.

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