Abstract

The capacity of T-lymphocytes to recognize "nonself" and tolerating "self" is formed as a result of positive and negative selection in the thymus. While obtaining and testing specificity of T-hybridomas, we demonstrated that the major part of peripheral pool of CD8+ T-lymphocytes carried receptors specific to "self" MHC class II molecules. Such an unexpected specificity of receptors has been found in some T-cell hybridomas produced by fusion of activated peripheral CD8+ T-lymphocytes with a tumor partner transfected by the coreceptor CD4 gene. The reactivity to "self" is not an experimental artifact due to an increased avidity of interaction of the hybridoma cells with antigen-presenting cells. Also, it is not an expression of reactivity of T-cells to superantigens, products of endogenous viruses of mouse breast cancer. The formation of a pool of such T-cells involves both cells with double receptor specificity and cells coexpressing two alpha-chains of T-cell receptor. Their appearance in the periphery can be due to the capacity of thymocytes differentiating in the direction of CD4+ cells to avoid negative selection via change of expression of coreceptor CD4 to CD8.

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