Abstract

T-cell identity is established by the expression of a clonotypic T-cell receptor (TCR), generated by somatic rearrangement of TCRα and β genes. The properties of the TCR determine both the degree of self-reactivity and the repertoire of antigens that can be recognized. For CD8 T cells, the relationship between TCR identity—hence reactivity to self—and effector function(s) remains to be fully understood and has rarely been explored outside of the H-2b haplotype. We measured the affinity of three structurally distinct CD8 T-cell-derived TCRs that recognize the identical H-2 Ld-restricted epitope, derived from the Rop7 protein of Toxoplasma gondii. We used CD8 T cells obtained from mice generated by somatic cell nuclear transfer as the closest approximation of primary T cells with physiological TCR rearrangements and TCR expression levels. First, we demonstrate the common occurrence of secondary rearrangements in endogenously rearranged loci. Furthermore, we characterized and compared the response of Rop7-specific CD8 T-cell clones upon Toxoplasma gondii infection as well as effector function and TCR signalling upon antigenic stimulation in vitro. Antigen-independent TCR cross-linking in vitro uncovered profound intrinsic differences in the effector functions between T-cell clones. Finally, by assessing the degree of self-reactivity and comparing the transcriptomes of naive Rop7 CD8 T cells, we show that lower self-reactivity correlates with lower effector capacity, whereas higher self-reactivity is associated with enhanced effector function as well as cell cycle entry under physiological conditions. Altogether, our data show that potential effector functions and basal proliferation of CD8 T cells are set by self-reactivity thresholds.

Highlights

  • Authors for correspondence: Peripheral self-reactivity regulates antigen-specific CD8 T-cell responses and cell division under physiological conditions

  • We reported the generation, using somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) [20 –22], of three lines of CD8 T-cell TN mice, all of which bear an ab T-cell receptor (TCR) specific for the peptide

  • The CD8 T cells that served as SCNT donors were obtained by cell sorting, using H-2 Ld tetramers loaded with the Rop7 epitope

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Summary

Introduction

These authors contributed to this study. Feld 583, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany. T cells play a key role in the immune response by assisting B cells in antibody production, activation of phagocytic cells or killing of infected cells. The stochastic assembly of an MHC-restricted ab T-cell receptor (TCR) during thymic development [1] requires positive and negative selection steps that ensure minimal affinity for the complex of self-peptide and MHC molecules, without causing overt and deleterious response against self [2,3,4,5]. Activation of antigen-specific T cells leads to clonal expansion and—in the case of CD4 T cells—functional polarization [7]. License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited

Results
Differences in T-cell receptor signalling in CD8
Discussion
Experimental procedures
Antibodies and reagents
Toxoplasma gondii infection þ þ
Cytokine secretion measurements
In vitro cytotoxicity assay
In vitro tetramer stimulation
4.10. RNA-sequencing analysis
25. Toebes M et al 2006 Design and use of conditional
Full Text
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