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Publication : αβ T cell receptors that do not undergo major histocompatibility complex-specific thymic selection possess antibody-like recognition specificities.

First Author  Tikhonova AN Year  2012
Journal  Immunity Volume  36
Issue  1 Pages  79-91
PubMed ID  22209676 Mgi Jnum  J:180750
Mgi Id  MGI:5307174 Doi  10.1016/j.immuni.2011.11.013
Citation  Tikhonova AN, et al. (2012) alphabeta T Cell Receptors that Do Not Undergo Major Histocompatibility Complex-Specific Thymic Selection Possess Antibody-like Recognition Specificities. Immunity 36(1):79-91
abstractText  Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction is the cardinal feature of T cell antigen recognition and is thought to be intrinsic to alphabeta T cell receptor (TCR) structure because of germline-encoded residues that impose MHC specificity. Here, we analyzed alphabetaTCRs from T cells that had not undergone MHC-specific thymic selection. Instead of recognizing peptide-MHC complexes, the two alphabetaTCRs studied here resembled antibodies in recognizing glycosylation-dependent conformational epitopes on a native self-protein, CD155, and they did so with high affinity independently of MHC molecules. Ligand recognition was via the alphabetaTCR combining site and involved the identical germline-encoded residues that have been thought to uniquely impose MHC specificity, demonstrating that these residues do not only promote MHC binding. This study demonstrates that, without MHC-specific thymic selection, alphabetaTCRs can resemble antibodies in recognizing conformational epitopes on MHC-independent ligands.
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