Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/64300
Título
Themis sets the signal threshold for positive and negative selection in T-cell development
Autor
Año del Documento
2013
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Nature 504:441–445. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12718
Resumen
This work shows that the Themis protein has a critical role in positive and negative thymocyte selection by dampening responses to low-affinity ligands but without affecting responses to high-affinity ligands, thus enabling positive selection of weakly self-reactive thymocytes. Themis is a protein expressed in T cells. Mice lacking it have severely reduced numbers of single-positive thymocytes and peripheral T cells, although the mechanism by which Themis controls T-cell development or function remains obscure. Nicholas Gascoigne and colleagues show here that Themis has a crucial role in thymocyte selection by regulating the signalling threshold between positive and negative selection. It dampens responses to low-affinity ligands but does not affect responses to high-affinity ligands, thus enabling positive selection of weakly self-reactive thymocytes. Development of a self-tolerant T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire with the potential to recognize the universe of infectious agents depends on proper regulation of TCR signalling. The repertoire is whittled down during T-cell development in the thymus by the ability of quasi-randomly generated TCRs to interact with self-peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) proteins. Low-affinity TCR interactions with self-MHC proteins generate weak signals that initiate ‘positive selection’, causing maturation of CD4- or CD8αβ-expressing ‘single-positive’ thymocytes from CD4+CD8αβ+ ‘double-positive’ precursors1. These develop into mature naive T cells of the secondary lymphoid organs. TCR interaction with high-affinity agonist self-ligands results in ‘negative selection’ by activation-induced apoptosis or ‘agonist selection’ of functionally differentiated self-antigen-experienced T cells2,3. Here we show that positive selection is enabled by the ability of the T-cell-specific protein Themis4,5,6,7,8,9 to specifically attenuate TCR signal strength via SHP1 recruitment and activation in response to low- but not high-affinity TCR engagement. Themis acts as an analog-to-digital converter translating graded TCR affinity into clear-cut selection outcome. By dampening mild TCR signals Themis increases the affinity threshold for activation, enabling positive selection of T cells with a naive phenotype in response to low-affinity self-antigens.
ISSN
0028-0836
Revisión por pares
SI
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
Aparece en las colecciones
Ficheros en el ítem
Tamaño:
7.059Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF
La licencia del ítem se describe como Atribución 4.0 Internacional