Kd. Moudgil et al., ANTIGEN-PROCESSING AND T-CELL REPERTOIRES AS CRUCIAL ALEATORY FEATURES IN INDUCTION OF AUTOIMMUNITY, Journal of autoimmunity, 9(2), 1996, pp. 227-234
Induction of self-reactive T cell responses leading eventually to auto
immune pathology involves several key events: (1) availability of a de
terminant cross-reactive with the pathogenic self or foreign determina
nt upon processing of native antigen; the foreign molecule bearing the
related determinant may have additional processing sites flanking the
determinant, or at least different ones (the same determinant may onl
y be available on the native self molecule under inflammatory conditio
ns) (2) a T cell bearing T cell receptor (TCR) capable of response to
the autoantigen; (3) ability of the processed self determinant to bind
efficiently to the appropriate major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
molecule as well as to interact with the appropriate TCR, coordinated
with the absence of competitively dominant determinants; and (4) the
lack of regulation. At any step of this cascade of interactions, the c
onditions could either favour induction of an autoreactive T cell resp
onse or the process may be truncated/stalled at any step without any a
dverse effect. A major component determining the outcome of the above
interactions is the aleatory nature of the antigen processing events.
Experiments highlighting these aleatory events are the focus of this r
eport. (C) 1996 Academic Press Limited