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    J Exp Med. 2007 Oct 29;204(11):2747-57. Epub 2007 Oct 22.

    T cell activation enhancement by endogenous pMHC acts for both weak and strong agonists but varies with differentiation state.

    Yachi PP, Lotz C, Ampudia J, Gascoigne NR.

    Department of Immunology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.

    T cells are extremely sensitive in their ability to find minute amounts of antigenic peptide in the midst of many endogenous peptides presented on an antigen-presenting cell. The role of endogenous peptides in the recognition of foreign peptide and hence in T cell activation has remained controversial for CD8(+) T cell activation. We showed previously that in a CD8(+) T cell hybridoma, nonstimulatory endogenous peptides enhance T cell sensitivity to antigen by increasing the coreceptor function of CD8. However, others were not able to detect such enhancement in naive and activated CD8(+) T cells. Here, we show that endogenous peptides substantially enhance the ability of T cells to detect antigen, an effect measurable by up-regulation of activation or maturation markers and by increased effector function. This enhancement is most pronounced in thymocytes, moderate in naive T cells, and mild in effector T cells. The importance of endogenous peptides is inversely proportional to the agonist activity of the stimulatory peptide presented. Unlike for CD4(+) T cells, the T cell receptor of CD8(+) T cells does not distinguish between endogenous peptides for their ability to enhance antigen recognition.

    PMID: 17954567 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 2118480

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