58 research outputs found

    The immunological synapse

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    T-cell activation requires interaction of T-cell antigen receptors with proteins of the major histocompatibility complex (antigen). This interaction takes place in a specialized cell-cell junction referred to as an immunological synapse. The immunological synapse contains at least two functional domains: a central cluster of engaged antigen receptors and a surrounding ring of adhesion molecules. The segregation of the T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) and adhesion molecules is based on size, with the TCR interaction spanning 15 nm and the lymphocyte-function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) interaction spanning 30-40 nm between the two cells. Therefore, the synapse is not an empty gap, but a space populated by both adhesion and signaling molecules. This chapter considers four aspects of the immunological synapse: the role of migration and stop signals, the role of the cytoskeleton, the role of self-antigenic complexes, and the role of second signals

    Charles Janeway Jr.

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    Cancer Biology Reviews, volume 1

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    Anti-Thy-1 antibody responses evoked by Thy-1 antigen expressed in transfected mouse mastocytoma cells and rat fibroblast.

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    The mouse genomic Thy-1.1 gene was isolated from a phage library constructed from AKR/J (Thy-1.1) mouse DNA. Partial nucleotide sequence analysis of the coding region showed that it has only a single nucleotide difference from the Thy-1.2 gene, namely that amino acid 89 reads CGA (Arg) in Thy-1.1 and CAA (Glu) in Thy-1.2, corresponding to the amino acid substitutions previously identified. It was subcloned into an SV-40 derived vector for transfection. Transient transfection into HeLa cells gave 2% positive staining by immunofluorescence. The gene in this vector was also co-transfected into L cells and mastocytoma cells (both of Thy-1.2 strain origin) together with the Agpt gene. L-cell clones selected for transformation proved almost negative for Thy-1.1 expression, and any positive clones gradually lost Thy-1.1 antigen expression in culture. On the contrary, all clones of mastocytoma transformants gave a high level of expression after more than 3 months in culture. The mastocytoma transformants were used to study the immunogenicity of Thy-1.1 molecules expressed on transfected cells. They evoked clear anti-Thy-1.1 plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses both in vivo and in vitro. The mastocytoma transformants also proved able to induce a T-dependent anti-Thy-1.1 antibody response in a cell transfer experiment. The immunogenicity of Thy-1.2 molecules on rat fibroblasts was also studied after transfection with a Thy-1.2 gene cosmid. Although Thy-1.2 expression was very low, these transfectants elicited a clear anti-Thy-1.2 PFC response from AKR spleen cells hyperimmunized against CBA thymocytes
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