Cutting Edge: Immunoregulation of Th Cells by Naturally Processed Peptide Antagonists

RT Carson, DD Desai, KM Vignali… - The Journal of …, 1999 - journals.aai.org
RT Carson, DD Desai, KM Vignali, DAA Vignali
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
Th cells recognize protein Ags as short peptides bound to MHC class II molecules. Altered
peptide ligands can antagonize (inhibit) T cell responses to stimulatory peptides. Peptides
generated by APC may contain peptide flanking residues (PFR), which lie outside the
minimal binding epitope and can be recognized by the TCR. Our data show that PFR-
dependent T cells were found to be potently antagonized by peptides that lack PFR and
responded poorly to native protein or the immunogenic epitope delivered by a recombinant …
Abstract
Th cells recognize protein Ags as short peptides bound to MHC class II molecules. Altered peptide ligands can antagonize (inhibit) T cell responses to stimulatory peptides. Peptides generated by APC may contain peptide flanking residues (PFR), which lie outside the minimal binding epitope and can be recognized by the TCR. Our data show that PFR-dependent T cells were found to be potently antagonized by peptides that lack PFR and responded poorly to native protein or the immunogenic epitope delivered by a recombinant influenza virus. These data provide the first evidence that Ag processing generates both stimulatory and antagonist peptides from a single immunogenic epitope, an observation that may have important implications for T cell immunoregulation and autoimmunity.
journals.aai.org