How some T cells escape tolerance induction

G Gammon, E Sercarz - Nature, 1989 - nature.com
G Gammon, E Sercarz
Nature, 1989nature.com
A FEATURE common to many animal models of autoimmune disease, for example,
experimental allergic encephalomyelitis1, experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis2
and collagen-induced arthritis3, is the presence of self-reactive T cells in healthy animals,
which are activated to produce disease by immunization with exogenous antigen. It is
unclear why these T cells are not deleted during ontogeny in the thymus and, having
escaped tolerance induction, why they are not spontaneously activated by self-antigen. To …
Abstract
A FEATURE common to many animal models of autoimmune disease, for example, experimental allergic encephalomyelitis1, experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis2 and collagen-induced arthritis3, is the presence of self-reactive T cells in healthy animals, which are activated to produce disease by immunization with exogenous antigen. It is unclear why these T cells are not deleted during ontogeny in the thymus and, having escaped tolerance induction, why they are not spontaneously activated by self-antigen. To investigate these questions, we have examined an experimental model in which mice are tolerant to an antigen despite the presence of antigen-reactive T cells4. We find that the T cells that escape tolerance induction are specific for minor determinants on the antigen. We propose that these T cells evade tolerance induction because some minor determinants are only available in relatively low amounts after in vivo processing of the whole antigen. For the same reason, these T cells are not normally activated but can be stimulated under special circumstances to circumvent tolerance.
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