T-Cell Receptors Are Expressed but Down-Regulated on Intradecidual T Lymphocytes

1993 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
TAKESHI MORII ◽  
KIYOSHI NISHIKAWA ◽  
SHIGERU SAITO ◽  
MASAHIRO ENOMOTO ◽  
AYAKO ITO ◽  
...  
1975 ◽  
Vol 142 (1) ◽  
pp. 197-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Binz ◽  
H Wigzell

Antigen-binding receptors on T lymphocytes and IgG antibodies with the same antigen-binding specificity as the T-cell receptors display shared or identical idiotypes. This was shown using a system where adult F1 hybrid rats between two inbred strains were inoculated with T lymphocytes from one parental strain. Such F1 hybrid rats produce antibodies directed against idiotypic determinants present on IgG alloantibodies, produced in the T donor genotype strain and with specificity for the alloantigens of the other parental strain. The idiotypic nature of the F1 antialloantibody serum against the parental alloantibodies was demonstrated both by indirect hemagglutination tests or by gel diffusion using alloantisera with different specificity as targets. Furthermore, the F1 anti-T-lymphocyte sera could be shown to contain antibodies against idiotypic parental T lymphocytes as well. This was shown by the capacity of the antisera, in the presence of complement, to wipe out the relevant parental T-cell reactivity against the other parental strain (as measured in MLC or GVH) whilst leaving the T-lymphocyte reactivity against a third, unrelated allogeneic strain intact. These findings demonstrate that F1 hybrid rats inoculated with parental T lymphocytes make anti-idiotypic antibodies directed against both the T cell receptors and IgG alloantibodies of that parental strain with specificity for alloantigens of the other parental strain. In order to prove identity between the anti-idiotypic antibodies against the B and T-cell antigen-binding molecules the following experiments were carried out; highly purified IgG from relevant alloantibody-containing serum in immunosorbent from could be shown to selectively remove both anti-idiotypic activities from the F1 antiserum. Further more, parental normal T lymphocytes could be shown capable of removing from the anti-idiotypic antisera all those antibodies that would cause agglutination of the relevant alloantibody-coated erythrocytes in the indirect agglutination assay. We would thus conclude that T and B lymphocytes reactive against a given antigenic determinant use receptors with antigen-binding areas coded for by the same variable gene subset(s).


1991 ◽  
Vol 164 (2) ◽  
pp. 702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes Dietl ◽  
Hans-Peter Horny ◽  
Peter Ruck ◽  
Klaus Marzusch ◽  
Edwin Kaiserling ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Jason Paul Buttigieg ◽  
Jason Paul Buttigieg ◽  
Kristian Helmerson ◽  
Brendon Coventry

We know that T-cell activation and effector function is integral for cancer cell destruction in immunotherapeutic treatment in oncology. The fundamental behaviour of T-cells at the time of activation is poorly understood but is likely to be central to this action. Cellular clustering occurs on at least two levels: gathering of multiple mobile cells of similar type, and aggregation between different cell types. Receptors are implicated in both of these processes. Analysis of receptor clustering is a different process whereby receptors form clusters on the cell membrane surface and can be studied to determine their relationship to immune activation. Receptor clustering has been shown to occur in some (perhaps all) cell types, but little is known about this phenomenon, particularly in T-lymphocytes. T-Cell Receptors (TCRs) which are important for the activation of T-lymphocytes. T-cell receptors, also known as cluster of differentiation 3 (CD3) molecules, bind specific antigen to create intracellular signaling in the process of T-cell activation as part of the immune response. The detail of how TCRs physically behave on the T-lymphocyte surface and specifically how they cluster remains unclear, including during the early phases of initiation of immune activation in the T-cell response. The aim of this review is to investigate how receptor clustering that has been studied, can be more effectively studied in the future and what the current evidence suggests about TCR clustering/T-cell activity relationships.


1994 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 440-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Rodolfo ◽  
Chiara Castelli ◽  
Cinzia Bassi ◽  
Paola Accornero ◽  
Marialuisa Sensi ◽  
...  

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