The duration of antigen receptor signalling determines CD4+ versus CD8+ T-cell lineage fate
Koji Yasutomo,
Carolyn Doyle,
Lucio Miele and
Ronald N. Germain ()
Additional contact information
Koji Yasutomo: Lymphocyte Biology Section, Laboratory of Immunology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
Carolyn Doyle: Duke University Medical Centre
Lucio Miele: Cancer Immunology Program, Cardinal Bernardin Cancer Centre, Loyola University Medical Centre
Ronald N. Germain: Lymphocyte Biology Section, Laboratory of Immunology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
Nature, 2000, vol. 404, issue 6777, 506-510
Abstract:
Abstract Signals elicited by binding of the T-cell antigen receptor and the CD4/CD8 co-receptor to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules control the generation of CD4+ (helper) or CD8+ (cytotoxic) T cells from thymic precursors that initially express both co-receptor proteins1. These precursors have unique, clonally distributed T-cell receptors with unpredictable specificity for the self-MHC molecules involved in this differentiation process2. However, the mature T cells that emerge express only the CD4 (MHC class II-binding) or CD8 (MHC class I-binding) co-receptor that complements the MHC class-specificity of the T-cell receptor. How this matching of co-receptor-defined lineage and T-cell-receptor specificity is achieved remains unknown1,3,4, as does whether signalling by the T-cell receptors, co-receptors and/or general cell-fate regulators such as Notch-1 (refs 5, 6) contributes to initial lineage choice, to subsequent differentiation processes or to both. Here we show that the CD4 versus CD8 lineage fate of immature thymocytes is controlled by the co-receptor-influenced duration of initial T-cell receptor-dependent signalling. Notch-1 does not appear to be essential for this fate determination, but it is selectively required for CD8+ T-cell maturation after commitment directed by T-cell receptors. This indicates that the signals constraining CD4 versus CD8 lineage decisions are distinct from those that support subsequent differentiation events such as silencing of co-receptor loci.
Date: 2000
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DOI: 10.1038/35006664
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