Publication Date:
1990
Short description:
Ria, F., Chan, B. M., Scherer, M. T., Smith, J. A., Gefter, M. L., Immunological activity of covalently linked T-cell epitopes, <>, 1990; 343 (6256): 381-383. [doi:10.1038/343381a0] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/117188]
abstract:
Immune response to proteins necessarily involve the recognition by T lymphocytes of a peptide or peptides derived from a a protein complexed with a major histocompatibility antigen. Th T-cell response of BALB/c mice to the bacteriophage lambda cI repressor protein (residues 1-102) is directed predominantly towards the epitope contained within a single peptide encompassing residues 12-26 (refs 1, 2). Similar phenomenon of immunodominance of a particular peptide have also been observed in other protein systems. The mechanism that have been suggested to account for the focusing of the T-cell response are partial deletion in the T cell repertoire, biased antigen processing, and competition for binding to the presenting molecule, the major histocompatibility complex encoded class II transplantation antigen. In a model system with a polypeptide containing two synthetically linked immunologically active epitopes, we now demonstrate the existence of a hierarchy between these epitopes, so that the immune response elicited is directed mainly towards the more immunogenic epitope whereas the less immunogenic epitope elicits little or no T cell reactivity. in addition the same hierarchy of dominance is also apparent when the polypeptide id used to induce tolerance in the periphery in adult mice.
Iris type:
Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
Keywords:
Animals; Epitopes; Histocompatibility Antigens Class II; Hybridomas; Immune Tolerance; Immunization; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Ovalbumin; Peptide Fragments; Repressor Proteins; T-Lymphocytes; Transcription Factors; Viral Proteins; Viral Regulatory and Accessory Proteins; DNA-Binding Proteins
List of contributors:
Ria, Francesco; Chan, B M; Scherer, M T; Smith, J A; Gefter, M L
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