The role of self-peptides in positive selection of CD4+ T cells has been controversial. We show that some self-peptides are presented by the MHC class II molecule I-Ab in mice lacking li or H-2M but not in mice expressing a transgene-encoded peptide fused to I-Ab. In experiments using specific antibodies to block selection, these low-abundance self-peptides were implicated in the positive selection of some CD4+ T cells in H-2M(-/- ) mice. However, all three mutant backgrounds failed to positively select two class II-restricted transgenic T cell receptors. Our findings suggest that minor components of the self-peptide repertoire can contribute to positive selection of a significant number of CD4+ T cells. In addition, the data suggest that T cell receptor repertoires selected in wild-type mice and in mice displaying limited spectra of self-peptides are distinct.
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Grubin, C. E., Kovats, S., DeRoos, P., & Rudensky, A. Y. (1997). Deficient positive selection of CD4 T cells in mice displaying altered repertoires of MHC class II-bound self-peptides. Immunity, 7(2), 197–208. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1074-7613(00)80523-3