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Title: T cell receptor expression and differential proliferative responses by T cells specific to a myasthenogenic peptide. Author: Kirshner SL, Waisman A, Zisman E, Ben-Nun A, Mozes E. Journal: Cell Immunol; 1997 Aug 25; 180(1):20-8. PubMed ID: 9316635. Abstract: Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a T-cell-regulated autoimmune disease in which a pathological autoantibody response is mounted against the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor of the neuromuscular junction. Our laboratory previously identified a T cell epitope, p195-212, derived from the human acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit, which triggered PBL to proliferate from about 70% of MG patients tested. p195-212 was also found to be an immunodominant T cell epitope in SJL mice and a cryptic epitope in C3H.SW mice. Inoculation of naive SJL mice with cells from a p195-212-specific syngeneic T cell line caused MG-related autoimmune manifestations in those mice. In these studies we analyzed TCR alpha and beta chain sequences used by T cell lines and clones from both high- and low-responder mouse strains in response to p195-212. T cell lines generated from either strain expressed single TCR V beta gene segments (V beta 17 in SJL mice and V beta 8 in C3H.SW mice). By deleting V beta 17-expressing T cells in p195-212-immunized SJL mice we established a T cell line that expressed the V beta 6 gene product, suggesting that SJL mice are not limited to using a single V beta gene segment in response to p195-212. In addition, we found that N- and/or C-terminal-truncated peptides of p195-212, presented under the same culture conditions to different clones bearing the same TCR alpha beta chain, could elicit very different proliferative responses from the clones. Thus, even within a constrained system, factors other than TCR sequence contribute to the differential stimulation of T cell responses.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]