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Section of Immunobiology, Yale University School of Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New Haven, CT 06520
| Abstract |
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protein, transgenic (Tg) mice
expressing the 1H3.1 
TCR that is specific for the
E
5268:I-Ab complex display drastic intrathymic
deletion. Although peripheral T cells from these mice remained
unresponsive to the E
5268:I-Ab complex, they contained
a subpopulation able to specifically react to this complex in the
presence of exogenous IL-2, indicating that some 1H3.1 
TCR Tg T
cells have escaped clonal deletion and efficiently populated the
periphery. IL-2-dependent, E
5268:I-Ab
complex-responsive T cells were CD4-CD8- and
expressed the 1H3.1 
TCR. Such T cells could develop
intrathymically, did not show sign of regulatory/suppressor activity,
displayed a typical naive phenotype, and seemed to persist in vivo over
time. CD4-CD8- TCR Tg T cells were also
detected when the surface density of the deleting ligand was increased
on MHC class II+ cells. In addition, the development of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells could be
supported by I-Ab molecules. These observations indicate
that CD4 surface expression neither specifies, nor is required for, the
thymic export of mature thymocytes expressing a MHC class II-restricted

TCR. The data also show that, although the avidity of the
interaction involved in intrathymic deletion is significantly lower
than that involved in mature T cell activation, its range can be large
enough to be influenced by the presence or absence of coreceptors.
Finally, the margin created by the absence of CD4 coreceptor was
substantial because it could accommodate various amounts of the
deleting ligand on thymic stromal cells. | Introduction |
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T lymphocytes relies on the
interaction of their Ag receptor (TCR) with self peptide:self MHC
complexes expressed on thymic epithelial cells. Failure to establish
such interactions leads to the death of immature thymocytes by
apoptosis (neglect). This interaction either rescues immature
thymocytes from apoptosis and signals them to complete their maturation
(intrathymic positive selection), or causes their physical
elimination from the thymic microenvironment by precipitating the
execution of the apoptotic program (clonal deletion). These opposed
outcomes allow the generation of a highly diverse mature TCR repertoire
that is depleted of T cells highly reactive to most intrathymically
expressed self determinants (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Besides clonal
deletion, additional mechanisms can operate to neutralize autoreactive
thymocytes. Those include induction of a state of functional
inactivation termed anergy (6, 7, 8), reduction of TCR
surface expression (9, 10), as well as TCR
-chain
substitution (11, 12).
Despite these multiple mechanisms of intrathymic tolerance induction,
functional autoreactive 
T lymphocytes can be detected in the
periphery of both human and unmanipulated laboratory animals
(13). The possibility that many autoreactive T cells may
not be tolerized at the immature stage simply because the self Ags they
are able to react against are not expressed in the thymic
microenvironment may have been overestimated because multiple
tissue-specific Ags that are targets in major inflammatory autoimmune
diseases are indeed significantly expressed in the thymic
microenvironment and particularly in medullary epithelial cells
(14).
Because many inflammatory autoimmune disorders involve MHC class
II-restricted self Ag-specific 
T cells (15), it
appears fundamental to better understand the principles underlying the
induction of central tolerance to self peptide:self MHC class II
complexes, as well as exceptions to these principles.
In this study, we identify and characterize MHC class II-restricted,
self Ag-specific 
T cells that, due to lack of CD4 coreceptor
expression, escape intrathymic deletion without being antagonized or
acquiring suppressor/regulatory activity, populate and seem to persist
in peripheral lymphoid organs and are capable of reacting to their
cognate Ag in an IL-2-dependent fashion.
| Materials and Methods |
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C57BL/6, B10.BR-H2k2
H2-T18a/SgSnJ (B10.BR), and
B10.A-H2i5 H2-Tl8a (5R)
SgSnJ (B10.A(5R)) mice were obtained from The Jackson Laboratory (Bar
Harbor, ME). The B10.A(5R) RAG-2-deficient mice were obtained
from K. Bottomly (Yale University). The 1H3.1 TCR transgenic
(Tg)4 mice
(V
1/V
6) were described elsewhere (16). The
I-Ab
/invariant chain (Ii) double-deficient
mice were a gift of P. Marrack and J. Kappler (Howard Hughes Medical
Institute (HHMI), Denver, CO). The Ig
-E
and 107.1
I-E
d Tg mice were a gift of R. A. Flavell
(HHMI, Yale University) (17, 18, 19). Mice were genotyped by
PCR using tail genomic DNA and specific oligonucleotides.
mAbs, immunostaining, and flow cytometry
Fluorescent labeled mAbs were used for multicolor staining.
Briefly, 0.2 x 106 cells were incubated in
microtiter U-bottom plates with saturating concentration of labeled mAb
in 20 µl, for 30 min on ice. Cells were washed twice and analyzed
immediately. For two-step staining, cells were incubated first with
purified mAbs in PBS, 2% FCS/0.1% NaN3,
followed by a F(ab')2 of goat anti-mouse
Ig-FITC conjugate (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). The mAbs used were
anti-V
6 FITC (clone RR4-7), anti-V
2,3.2,8.3,11.1/.2 FITC
(B20.1, RR3-16, B21.14, RR8-1), anti-CD45R/B220-PE (RA3-6B2),
anti-CD86/B7-2 biotin (GL1), anti-CD5 FITC (53-7.3),
anti-NK1.1 FITC (PK136) from BD PharMingen (San Diego, CA),
anti-CD8
PE/FITC/CyChrome (53-6.7) from Life Technologies (Grand
Island, NY), and anti-CD4 Quantum Red (H129.19) from Sigma-Aldrich.
The Y3JP (mouse IgG2a, anti-I-Ab), 25-9-17
(mouse IgG2a, anti-I-Ab), Y-Ae
(mouse IgG2b, anti-Ab + E
5268), Y17
(mouse IgG2b, anti-I-E), 53-6.72 and 2.43 (both rat IgG2b,
anti-CD8), and 14.8 (rat IgG2b, anti-CD45RA (B220)) mAbs were
affinity purified from hybridoma supernatants. A FACScan flow cytometer
and the CellQuest software, both from BD Biosciences (Mountain View,
CA), were used to collect and analyze the data. Nonviable cells were
excluded using forward and side scatter electronic gating. For cell
sorting, freshly isolated lymph node cells were triple stained for CD4,
CD8, and V
6. CD4+ and
CD4- populations were sorted after gating on
V
6+ cells using a
FACStarPlus station (BD Biosciences).
Cytokine assays
For detection of IL-4 and IL-10, T cells from 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice were stimulated with purified B10.A(5R) APCs with or without exogenous IL-2 (20 U/ml) for 20 h. Supernatants were collected, and cytokine secretion was determined by sandwich ELISA using standard techniques. Purified 11B11 (rat IgG1) and biotinylated BVD6-24G2 (BD PharMingen) mAbs were used to detect mouse IL-4. JES5-2A5 (BD PharMingen) and biotinylated SXC-1 (rat IgM) mAbs were used to detect mouse IL-10.
Functional assays
For proliferation assay, T cells were cultured in U-bottom
96-well plates for 3 days at 37°C in Clicks Eagle Hanks amino
acid medium (Irvine Scientific, Santa Ana, CA) supplemented with 5%
FCS, 5 x 10-5 M 2-ME, 2 mM
L-glutamine, and 50 µg/ml gentamicin. In some cases,
CD4+ T cells were enriched to 90/95% by
depletion of CD8+ and MHC class
II+ cells using anti-CD8, anti-B220, and
anti-I-Ab mAbs. T cells (3050 x
103/well) were stimulated using irradiated
C57BL/6 splenocytes (2.5 x 105/well), plus
serial dilutions of E
5268 peptide (ASFEAQGALANIAVDKA) in 150
µl.
In most experiments, rIL-2 was used at 1020 U/ml. LPS blasts were obtained by treating splenocytes with LPS (Sigma-Aldrich) for 2 days in culture. The anti-mouse CD28 mAb used was purified R2/60.1.21 (rat IgM). The stimulated cells were incubated in duplicate wells, and 1 µCi of [3H]thymidine/well was added to the culture during the last 12 h. The plates were then harvested, and cpm were determined. For inhibition experiments, mAbs were sterile filtered and added to cultures (35 µg/ml).
Suppression assay
To test the suppression potential of CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 T cells, T cells from 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice were cultured in the presence of purified B10.A(5R) APCs and purified naive CD4+ 1H3.1 TCR Tg T cells labeled with CFSE (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in the presence or absence of exogenous IL-2. The naive CD4+ to CD4-CD8- T cell ratio was 1:1. Unlabeled naive CD4+ 1H3.1 TCR Tg T cells were used as control for TCR ligand accessibility constraint. The cultures were analyzed by flow cytometry after 34 days.
Fetal thymic organ culture
The 1H3.1 
TCR Tg+ (C57BL/6 x
B10.BR)F1 thymic lobes were excised after 15 days
of gestations and cultured in 10% FCS RPMI 1640 medium using Transwell
polycarbonate membrane (Corning Costar, Cambridge, MA). Medium was
replaced every 2 days. After 8 days of culture, thymocyte suspensions
were prepared and analyzed by immunostaining and flow cytometry.
| Results |
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5268:I-Ab
complex-responsive T cells in the periphery of 1H3.1 
TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice
We previously studied intrathymic negative selection imposed by an
endogenously assembled and expressed self peptide:MHC class II complex
in vivo (20). We used Tg C57BL/6
(I-Ab+/I-E
-) mice
expressing the E
5268:I-Ab complex-specific
1H3.1 
TCR (21, 22) bred to B10.A(5R)
(I-Ab+/I-E
+) mice as
well as to several C57BL/6 I-E
d Tg lines
expressing the E
5268:I-Ab complex in
distinct cell types (17, 18, 19). As a result of tolerance
induction, 1H3.1 TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice displayed severely reduced
thymic cellularity, and their lymph node cells reacted to anti-CD3
stimulation, but remained unresponsive to B10.A(5R) APCs that
constitutively express the E
5268:I-Ab
complex (20). However, a proliferative response to
B10.A(5R) splenocytes could be observed in the presence of exogenous
IL-2 (Fig. 1
A). This response
was in part Ag specific because the Y-Ae mAb, which also
specifically reacts to the E
5268:I-Ab
complex (23), reduced the IL-2-dependent proliferation
when added to the culture (Fig. 1
B). In contrast with
Y-Ae, the isotype-matched (IgG2b) Y17 anti-I-E mAb did
not reduce the reactivity. Additionally, the 25.9.17 mAb that reacts to
multiple peptide:I-Ab complexes, but not to the
E
5268:I-Ab complex (24), had no
effect. This confirmed that the response to B10.A(5R) APCs observed in
the presence of IL-2 relied in part on the specific recognition of the
E
5268:I-Ab complex, and therefore suggested
that a T cell population expressing the 1H3.1 
TCR escaped clonal
deletion in the 1H3.1 TCR/I-E
double-Tg animals. Interestingly,
IL-2-dependent, E
5268:I-Ab
complex-responsive T cells were detected in 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R)
mice, in 1H3.1 TCR/Ig
-E
double-Tg mice that express I-E
on B
cells and dendritic cells at a lower level than in B10.A(5R) mice
(19), and also in 1H3.1 TCR/107.1 double-Tg mice that
express I-E
on all MHC class II-positive cells, but at a higher
level than in B10.A(5R) mice (17, 18). Thus, peripheral
lymphoid organs from 1H3.1 
TCR Tg I-E
+
mice contain T cells able to specifically react to APCs presenting the
E
5268:I-Ab complex in the presence of
exogenous IL-2.
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TCR Tg T
cells
V
6+ T cells were clearly detectable in
secondary lymphoid organs as well as in the blood of 1H3.1 TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice. These cells, which display a virtually normal TCR
expression level on their surface, were essentially CD4/CD8 double
negative, with few CD4+ T cells
(20). Both specific proliferative responses and cytokine
production by CD4+ 1H3.1 
TCR Tg naive T
cells are inhibitable by anti-CD4 mAbs (unpublished observation).
Therefore, the fact that no significant inhibition was observed in the
presence of the anti-CD4 mAb GK1.5 (Fig. 1
B) suggested
that the IL-2-dependent response of lymph node cells from 1H3.1
TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice to the Y-Ae epitope was not
dependent on CD4+ 1H3.1 TCR Tg T cells.
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells were indeed responsible for the
IL-2-dependent, specific response to B10.A(5R) APCs because, after
sorting of both CD4-CD8-
V
6+ and CD4+
V
6+ lymph node cells from 1H3.1 
TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice, a dose-dependent response to the E
5268
peptide in the presence of IL-2 was observed only for the
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ subset (Fig. 1
C). The
V
6+ CD4+ subset
displayed a background response that was not specific because it was
not dependent on the peptide dose and most likely corresponds to the
non-Y-Ae blockable fraction of the response detected in the
inhibition experiments (see Fig. 1
B). The data in Fig. 1
C also demonstrate that the
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ and V
6+
CD4+ subsets were not suppressing the response of
each other in the absence of IL-2 because neither of them responded to
B10.A(5R) APCs after separation.
Accordingly, the phenotypic analysis of 1H3.1 TCR/I-E
double-Tg
lymph node cells cultured in the presence of B10.A(5R) APCs plus IL-2
revealed that the proliferating cells were
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ (not shown). Finally, the definitive
evidence that CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells seen in 1H3.1 
TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice can express the complete 1H3.1 
TCR is that such
cells were readily detectable in spleen, lymph nodes, and peripheral
blood of recombination-activating gene-deficient
(Rag-2-/-) 1H3.1 
TCR Tg B10.A(5R) mice
(Fig. 2
A). In addition,
splenocytes and lymph node cells from these mice readily proliferated
in response to the Y-Ae epitope in the presence of exogenous
IL-2 and maintained a
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cell surface phenotype (Fig. 2
B). Thus,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells populate peripheral lymphoid organs of 1H3.1 TCR
Tg/I-E
+ mice and are capable of responding to
the E
5268:I-Ab complex in an IL-2-dependent
fashion.
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5258:I-Ab complex-responsive,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR Tg T cells display a naive
mouse T cell phenotype
Similar to V
6+CD4+
T cells, which populate the periphery of normal 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
C57BL/6 mice, freshly isolated
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells from secondary lymphoid organs of
1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice were
essentially
CD44lowCD62LhighCD25-
(Fig. 3
A), and therefore
displayed a phenotype most consistent with a naive T cell status
(25). When the deleting mice were not deficient in
RAG molecules,
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells were also
CD44lowCD62Lhigh and lacked
surface expression of the activation markers CD25 and CD69
(Fig. 3
B). In sharp contrast, many
CD4+ V
6+ cells displayed
an activated/memory phenotype: they were
CD44highCD62Llow. Besides,
a significant fraction of them were clearly positive for CD25 and CD69
surface expression (Fig. 3
B). These features indicated that
among residual CD4+ V
6+
cells, there were cells that had encountered their Ag in vivo, most
likely in the thymus, and were functionally altered because sorted
CD4+ V
6+ were not
specifically responsive to their cognate Ag (Fig. 1
C). Some
V
6+ CD4+ cells certainly
expressed endogenously rearranged TCR
-chains because this
population displayed an increased frequency of V
(2, 3.2, 8.3,
11.1/.2)+ cells relative to mature
V
6+ CD4+ cells from
nondeleting 1H3.1 TCR Tg mice (2530% vs 36%). In contrast, the
frequency of V
(2, 3.2, 8.3, 11.1/.2)+ cells
among CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 T
cells was rather lower (from 1 to 2.5%). Collectively, the data
indicate that peripheral
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR Tg T
cells that are not subject to deletion in vivo are characterized by a
naive T cell phenotype. This observation is consistent with the fact
that the 1H3.1 
TCR is entirely dependent on CD4 coengagement,
most likely through lck kinase recruitment, to signal T
cells for activation upon confrontation of the
E
5268:I-Ab complex (our unpublished
observation).
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Because appropriate costimulation is required for efficient
activation of naive 
T cells to occur (15), we asked
whether the response of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells to the E
5268:I-Ab complex could
be restored by supplying additional costimuli. T cells from 1H3.1 TCR
Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice incubated in the
presence of B10.A(5R) APCs plus the R2/60.1.21 anti-CD28 mAb
mounted a specific proliferative response that was 2530% of that
seen in the presence of exogenous IL-2 (Fig. 4
A). A similar result was
obtained when CD4-CD8-
1H3.1 TCR Tg Rag-2-/- T cells were stimulated
using irradiated B cell blasts derived from B10.A(5R) splenocytes using
LPS treatment; the response was 2025% of that seen in the presence
of IL-2 (Fig. 4
A). These experiments indicated that
additional costimulation, represented in this study by further
engagement of CD28 or by exposure to B7-1/2high
B10.A(5R) APCs, could partially restore the response to the
E
5268:I-Ab complex. In contrast, increased
strength of the signal delivered through the 1H3.1 
TCR also
induced detectable activation of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR Tg
Rag-2-/- T cells. This was evidenced by the
fact that truncation variants of the E
5268 peptide (such as
E
5267 and E
5466) that trigger an increased response of
CD4+1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells (26)
could induce a detectable dose-dependent proliferative response (Fig. 4
B). We conclude that, in the absence of IL-2, additional
signal 2 or strengthened signal 1 could partially substitute for the
absence of CD4 coreceptor engagement by naive 1H3.1 
TCR Tg T
cells. Thus, CD4-CD8-
1H3.1 TCR Tg T cells display a certain level of responsiveness and
differ from both CD4+ and
CD8+ 
T cells that are inactivated in vivo
upon recognition of their cognate ligand and remain totally
unresponsive to strong stimuli, such as clonotypic Ab cross-linking
even in the presence of exogenous IL-2 (8, 27).
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5258:I-Ab complex-responsive,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells
Because the IL-2-dependent, E
5268:I-Ab
complex-responsive T cells were initially detected in secondary
lymphoid organs of the TCR/I-E
double-Tg mice, the possibility
existed that such cells developed extrathymically. In such case, T
cells may not confront the deleting ligand in the most efficient
context known to mediate clonal deletion, that is, in contact with
interdigitating (dendritic) cells that are MHC class
IIhigh and are present throughout the thymus with
the highest concentration at the corticomedullary junction
(28). For instance, the analysis of thymectomized male
mice reconstituted with bone marrow cells from HY TCR Tg female mice
has revealed that self-reactive T cells can develop extrathymically;
they are found in the spleen and the liver and are not subjected to
deletion (29). To examine the issue of extrathymic
differentiation in our system, we looked for
CD4-CD8-
V
6high cells in the thymus of TCR
Tg/Y-Ae+ mice. We repeatedly detected
CD4-CD8- cells among
V
6high thymocytes in 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice (Fig. 5
A). Such cells were less
frequent, yet present (15%), within the thymus of normal
(I-E
-) 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
Rag-1-/- mice. When total thymocytes were
exposed to E
5268 in culture, a dominant
V
6+CD4+ population
expanded in the case of normal 1H3.1 
TCR Tg mice, whereas no
expansion was detected among thymocytes cultured from 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice (not shown).
However, adding IL-2 to the culture induced expansion of
CD4-CD8-V
6+
cells from the thymus:
CD4-CD8-V
6+
cells represented 9095% of all cells after 1 wk of culture when
1H3.1 
TCR Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/-
thymocytes were stimulated using C57BL/6 APCs, E
5268, and IL-2
(Fig. 5
B). This indicated that
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells escaping negative selection are present intrathymically.
Finally, CD4-CD8-
V
6high cells were also detected in fetal
thymic organ culture derived from 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg+ (C57BL/6 x B10.BR)
F1 (i.e.,
I-Ab+/I-E
+) fetuses
(Fig. 5
C), demonstrating that, on a deleting background,
thymic CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells can truly result from intrathymic
development as opposed to in situ accumulation of cells that
differentiate extrathymically and recirculate.
|
5258
peptide-responsive, CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells
Because CD4-CD8-
1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells are detected in 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R)
Rag-2-/- mice, their intrathymic development
definitely does not involve, either in a direct or indirect manner,
engagement of alternate TCR
-chains resulting from endogenous
rearrangements. That is, escape from intrathymic deletion by
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells results neither from the rescue of 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
thymocytes already expressing endogenously rearranged, additional TCR
-chain, nor from induction of endogenous rearrangement upon
recognition of the deleting ligand. The detection of
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells in the thymus of 1H3.1 TCR Tg
B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice further indicates that
the development of these cells was independent of the emergence of
precursors of other T cell lineages because in such mice, all the
endogenous TCR loci remain unrearranged.
Reaggregation culture have shown that cortical epithelial cells
presenting the cognate Ag can induce immature thymocytes to
differentiate into
CD4-CD8- T cells able to
secrete IL-10 and suppress the proliferative response of naive
CD4+ T cells in the presence of IL-2
(30). We were not able to detect suppressive activity
among CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR
Tg Rag-2-/- T cells in the presence or absence
of IL-2. We also failed to detect secretion of IL-4 or IL-10 by these
cells by ELISA (not shown). Commitment of 1H3.1 thymic precursors to
nonconventional 
T cell lineages was also a possibility because
there are several precedents in the literature. For instance, immature
thymocytes have been shown to be driven along the
CD4-CD8- NK T cells
pathway (31, 32, 33, 34), or to acquire features of
intraepithelial lymphocytes (35). It appears not to be the
case in this study because we did not observe expression of either
NK1.1 or CD8
molecules on
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR Tg T
cells (not shown). Differentiation into the CD25+
suppressor/regulatory subset (36) was also unlikely
because, as mentioned above,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 TCR Tg
Rag-2-/- T cells from thymus or spleen did not
display suppressive activity and were constantly
CD4-, CD25- (Fig. 3
A), and CTLA-4- (not shown).
With respect to the requirement for MHC class II molecules, we observed
that some CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells could be detected in the periphery
of 1H3.1 
TCR Tg I-A
b-/- mice
(typically 23% of V
6+ cells) and could
expand in vitro in the presence of Ag plus IL-2 (Table I
). Thus, some
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells may develop in the absence of
I-A
b heterodimers. The 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
Ii-/- combination was convenient to examine the
role of I-A
b molecules (although at a
diminished surface expression level) because in such mice, the
development of CD4+1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells is
deficient (37) and therefore cannot outcompete that of
CD4-CD8-
TCR Tg T
cells. We observed that expression of I-A
b
molecules could promote the emergence of 1H3.1 TCR Tg
CD4-CD8- T cells. The
fact that CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells from 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
Ii-/- mice displayed a high proliferative
response relative to 1H3.1 
TCR Tg and 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
I-A
b-/- mice (Table I
) suggests that the
emergence of CD4-CD8- T
cells expressing the complete 1H3.1 
TCR is more efficient in
1H3.1 
TCR Tg Ii-/- mice. The data
support the notion that I-A
b MHC class II
molecules can efficiently support the emergence of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells. In regular 1H3.1 
TCR Tg mice, the low fraction of
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells may possibly reflect
outcompetition by CD4+1H3.1 
TCR Tg T
cells. Alternatively, it is possible that in Ii-deficient mice,
I-Ab molecules present self peptide(s) that is
not, or poorly presented in the presence of Ii and that acts as
appropriate ligand(s) for the development of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 T cells.
To this respect, the surface amount of CD5 was higher on
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells from 1H3.1 TCR Tg
Ii-/- mice than on
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells from normal 1H3.1 TCR Tg mice, yet
lower than that observed in 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R) (i.e.,
Y-Ae+) mice (Fig. 6
). Because the expression level of CD5
is determined by the signaling strength involved in selection
(38), the data suggest that exposure to self
peptide:I-Ab complexes causes a high intensity
signaling in CD4-CD8-
V
6+ T cells from 1H3.1 TCR Tg
Ii-/- mice relative to those of normal 1H3.1
TCR Tg mice.
|
|

TCR Tg T cells appeared to persist over time in the spleen
and lymph nodes of 1H3.1 TCR/I-E
double-Tg or 1H3.1 TCR Tg B10.A(5R)
Rag-2-/- mice because they were still abundant
at
6 mo of age. This may suggest that peripheral self peptide:self
MHC class II complexes were accessible to provide naive
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells with the appropriate signals needed for their persistence.
The data make the additional point that cellular interactions with B
lymphocytes are presumably not required for such peripheral persistence
to occur. | Discussion |
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+ mice was the presence of a
significant number of
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells both in the thymus and in the
periphery (20). The evidence that these cells contain true
1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells comes from the observation that
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells are abundant in the thymus, spleen,
and lymph nodes of 1H3.1 
TCR Tg B10.A(5R) mice with a deficient
recombinase activity (Rag-2-/-). Thus, on an
I-E
+ genetic background, lack of coreceptor
expression allows MHC class II-restricted autoreactive 
T cells
with a normal expression level of TCR to escape intrathymic deletion
and populate peripheral lymphoid organs.
The reason for absence of CD4 expression is unclear. It could
theoretically be due to actively reduced CD4 surface expression upon
confrontation of the deleting ligand. However, most studies describing
altered coreceptor expression report a partial reduction rather than a
complete loss of the expression (39, 40, 41, 42, 43), and in the case
of complete extinction, re-expression could be observed after in vitro
stimulation (9). In contrast,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg Rag-2-/- cells remained double negative in
all situations, even after activation with E
5268 plus IL-2. In
addition, we failed to detect CD4 expression by intracellular staining
of CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR Tg Rag-2-/- cells (not shown). It is
therefore possible that
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg cells emerge intrathymically as true double-negative cells. Indeed,
in 1H3.1 
TCR Tg Rag-1-/- mice on a
nondeleting (I-E
-) background, these cells
are seen both intrathymically (35% of
V
6high thymocytes) and in the periphery
(13% of V
6+ splenocytes) (not shown).
Interestingly, elegant experiments have indicated that MHC class
II-restricted 
T cells can mature intrathymically at a normal
rate without progressing through the
CD4+CD8+ stage
(44). In this study, the authors pointed out that the
surface expression of TCR typically seen at the early stages of thymic
development in TCR Tg mice may promote the maturation of thymocytes
lacking coreceptors. It is possible that such a phenomenon operates in
our system.
Unlike most 
T cells that have been inactivated in vivo
(27, 41, 45, 46),
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells retained a naive phenotype. For instance, when anergized in
vivo, MHC class II-restricted, influenza virus hemagglutinin-specific
CD4+ 
T cells acquired an activated/memory
cell phenotype and remained unresponsive to Ag or clonotypic Ab even in
the presence of IL-2 (27). Similarly, intrathymically
anergized CD8+ T cells were refractory to
activation by clonotypic Ab with or without IL-2 (8). In
our system, the addition of IL-2 most likely complements for the lack
of CD4 engagement without which 1H3.1 
T cells are unable to
react to E
5268 (unpublished observation). We believe the
non-Y-Ae blockable proliferation seen when IL-2 is added to
total 1H3.1 TCR Tg/I-E
+ splenocytes is most
likely due to CD4+V
6+
cells because this subset includes a sizable fraction of
CD25+ and therefore IL-2-responsive cells.
The extensive analysis of T cells from male mice carrying the male
Ag-specific, Db-restricted, HY 
TCR
revealed that the accumulation of
CD4-CD8- HY 
TCR Tg
T cells corresponds to the expression of the transgene-encoded 
TCR into cells of the 
lineage (40, 47). This
phenomenon may well take place in the case of 1H3.1
TCR/I-E
+ double-Tg mice. However, the
abundance of CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells in the thymus and periphery of 1H3.1

TCR Tg B10.A(5R) Rag-2-/- mice indicates
that the emergence of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells is not necessarily dependent on the development of other T
cell lineages, because in these mice, all endogenous TCR loci remain
unrearranged, and therefore precursors committed to other lymphocyte
lineages cannot emerge.
The fine interactions that drive positive selection of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg cells remain unclear. We observed that the MHC class II molecules
expressed in Ii-/- mice could assist their
development. In the absence of I-A
b molecules,
these cells were still detectable, suggesting that some of them may
develop independently of the expression of the restricting MHC element,
as it has been observed in the HY TCR Tg model (48, 49).
Alternatively, one cannot formally exclude that the few
CD4-CD8-
V
6+ cells seen on the 1H3.1 
TCR Tg
I-A
b-/- background were selected on rare
chimeric MHC class II molecules generated upon assembly of
I-A
b and I-E
b chains.
On the deleting background, it is possible that the
E
5268:I-Ab complex itself supports the
intrathymic positive selection of 1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells lacking
coreceptors. The elevated CD5 expression level displayed by these cells
supports this idea. Indeed, epitopes structurally related to the
E
5268:I-Ab complex are major contributor to
the positive selection of CD4+ 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells on a C57BL/6 background (26), and recognition
of a covalent configuration of the
E
5268:I-Ab complex (50) was
able to support intrathymic positive selection of
CD4+1H3.1 
TCR Tg T cells in vivo
(51). In the same line of argument, it was documented that
the development of
CD4-CD8low HY TCR Tg T
cells could be driven by recognition of their cognate Ag on bone
marrow-derived cells (49). It was also observed that
male, but not female, epitopes could support the extrathymic
development of HY TCR Tg T cells after reconstitution of thymectomized
recipients with bone marrow (29).
Expression of alternate TCR
-chains can allow autoreactive 
T
cells to escape intrathymic deletion (52, 53, 54, 55, 56). It is
assumed that, in such a situation,
-chains compete for pairing with
the Tg
-chain. This reduces the surface expression level of the
self-reactive TCR and lowers the sensitivity to the cognate ligand. It
was also reported that TCR
-chain substitution could allow
developing T cells to escape deletion (11, 12). This could
occur by internalization of the Tg
-chain and its replacement by
endogenously generated alternate
-chains. Re-expression of the
original
-chain could then be observed in vitro (12).
Based on the phenotype of the 1H3.1 
TCR Tg B10.A(5R)
Rag-2-/- mice mentioned above, we conclude that
neither of these two phenomena were required for
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells to escape clonal deletion.
The escape from intrathymic clonal deletion in the absence of
coreceptor expression has at least two implications with respect to

T cell development. First, the presence of
CD4-CD8- T cells in the
lymphoid organs of the TCR/I-E double-Tg mice indicates that surface
expression of CD4 coreceptor molecules constitutes neither a
requirement nor a signal for mature thymocytes carrying a MHC class
II-restricted 
TCR to leave the thymic compartment and to home to
and populate the periphery. Second, different experimental systems have
shown that TCR-MHC ligand interactions involved in the intrathymic
deletion of a given T cell are less stringent than those involved in
the activation of its mature counterpart (57, 58, 59, 60, 61). For
instance, in the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus TCR Tg system,
lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus epitope variants, which are poorly
or not recognized by peripheral TCR Tg T cells, can respectively cause
complete and partial intrathymic deletion (58, 62). Our
observation indicates that although the intrathymic cell-cell
interaction involved in deletion has low stringency, it is not low at
the point that it cannot be influenced by the coreceptor. At
least for the 1H3.1 specificity, it appears that the lack of CD4
coreceptor expression can change the outcome of the
interaction, that is, convert negative into positive selection. The
likely, but not necessarily correct explanation is that the recruitment
of the lck kinase, which associates with the tail of CD4, is
required to signal 1H3.1 TCR Tg thymocytes for deletion. Remarkably,
the margin created by the absence of CD4 engagement was not so narrow
that an increase in the density of the deleting complexes on bone
marrow-derived cells (the most efficient stromal cell type in mediating
intrathymic clonal deletion) would cause intrathymic deletion of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells. This is illustrated by the detection of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells both in 1H3.1 
TCR/Ig
-E
double-Tg, 1H3.1 
TCR Tg B10.A(5R), and 1H3.1 
TCR/107.1 double-Tg mice, which
respectively have a low, normal, and elevated expression level of the
E
5268:I-Ab complex on dendritic cells.
There is ample evidence that naive 
T cells require repeated
interactions of their TCR with self peptide:self MHC complexes for
their peripheral persistence (reviewed in Refs. 63 and
64). Memory 
T cells appear less dependent on MHC
contacts for their physical persistence, but such interaction appears
required for their functionality (65). In the case of
1H3.1 TCR Tg/I-E
+ mice, we have been able to
detect a significant and functional population of naive
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells in spleen and various lymph nodes at least for an
observation period of 5/6 mo. This contrasts with the fact that under
conditions of impaired peripheral survival, the number of MHC class
II-restricted T cells in spleen and lymph nodes is already declining at
the adult age (66). Thus,
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells appear able to receive appropriate survival signals in vivo.
If recognition of the E
5268:I-Ab complex
itself plays a role in the intrathymic emergence of
CD4-CD8- 1H3.1 
TCR
Tg T cells, as suggested by their high CD5 expression level, it is
plausible that it also contributes to the peripheral persistence of
these cells. Consistent with this notion is the fact that the covalent
configuration of the E
5268:I-Ab complex
could support both the intrathymic maturation and the peripheral
maintenance of naive CD4+1H3.1 
TCR Tg T
cells (51). Although
CD4-CD8- 
T cells
have been found to be active both in murine and human autoimmune
pathologies (67, 68, 69) and may theoretically originate from
such an escape from intrathymic clonal deletion, we did not notice
signs of autoimmune response in our system during the time of the
study.
In conclusion, we document in this work the existence of MHC class
II-restricted 
T cells specific for a self peptide:self MHC class
II complex that lacks coreceptor expression, escapes clonal deletion in
vivo, and remains able to specifically react to their cognate ligand in
the presence of IL-2. Such cells can develop in the thymus
independently of other T cell lineages, do not show signs of
regulatory/suppressor activity, retain a fully naive phenotype, and
persist over time in the periphery.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
-E
and 107.1 I-E
d Tg mice; and Charles
Annicelli and Joanne Daugherty for help with animal care. We also thank
X. He (Yale University) for discussion. | Footnotes |
|---|
2 Current address: CEA-G and Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unité 548, 17 rue des Martyrs, 38054 Grenoble cedex 9, France. ![]()
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Charles A. Janeway, Jr., Yale University Medical School, Section of Immunobiology, LH 416, 310 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520-8011. E-mail address: charles.janeway{at}yale.edu ![]()
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: Tg, transgenic; Ii, invariant chain. ![]()
Received for publication March 26, 2002. Accepted for publication October 23, 2002.
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