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The somatically generated T cell receptor CDR3a contributes to the MHC allele specificity of the T cell receptor

View ORCID ProfilePhilippa Marrack, Sai Harsha Krovi, Daniel Silberman, Janice White, Eleanora Kushnir, Maki Nakayama, James Crook, Thomas Danhorn, Sonia Leach, Randy Anselment, James Scott-Browne, Laurent Gapin, John Kappler
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/176388
Philippa Marrack
HHMI, National Jewish Health;
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  • For correspondence: marrackp@njhealth.org
Sai Harsha Krovi
UC Denver;
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Daniel Silberman
UC Denver;
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Janice White
National Jewish Health;
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Eleanora Kushnir
National Jewish Health;
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Maki Nakayama
UC Denver;
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James Crook
National Jewish Health;
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Thomas Danhorn
National Jewish Health;
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Sonia Leach
National Jewish Health;
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Randy Anselment
National Jewish Health;
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James Scott-Browne
La Jolla Institute
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Laurent Gapin
UC Denver;
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John Kappler
National Jewish Health;
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Abstract

Mature T cells bearing ab T cell receptors react with foreign antigens bound to alleles of major histocompatibility complex proteins (MHC) that they were exposed to during their development in the thymus, a phenomenon known as positive selection. The structural basis for positive selection has long been debated. Here, using mice expressing one of two different T cell receptor b chains and various MHC alleles, we show that positive selection-induced MHC bias of T cell receptors is affected both by the germline encoded elements of the T cell receptor a and b chain and, surprisingly, dramatically affected by the non germ line encoded CDR3 of the T cell receptor a chain. Thus, in addition to determining specificity for antigen, the non germline encoded elements of T cell receptors may help the proteins cope with the extremely polymorphic nature of major histocompatibility complex products within the species.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted August 15, 2017.

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The somatically generated T cell receptor CDR3a contributes to the MHC allele specificity of the T cell receptor
Philippa Marrack, Sai Harsha Krovi, Daniel Silberman, Janice White, Eleanora Kushnir, Maki Nakayama, James Crook, Thomas Danhorn, Sonia Leach, Randy Anselment, James Scott-Browne, Laurent Gapin, John Kappler
bioRxiv 176388; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/176388
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The somatically generated T cell receptor CDR3a contributes to the MHC allele specificity of the T cell receptor
Philippa Marrack, Sai Harsha Krovi, Daniel Silberman, Janice White, Eleanora Kushnir, Maki Nakayama, James Crook, Thomas Danhorn, Sonia Leach, Randy Anselment, James Scott-Browne, Laurent Gapin, John Kappler
bioRxiv 176388; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/176388

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