[No authors listed]
Overtly self-reactive TÂ cells are removed during thymic selection. However, it has been recently established that T cell self-reactivity promotes protective immune responses. Apparently, the level of self-reactivity of mature TÂ cells must be tightly balanced. Our mathematical model and experimental data show that the dynamic regulation of CD4- and CD8-LCK coupling establish the self-reactivity of the peripheral TÂ cell pool. The stoichiometry of the interaction between CD8 and LCK, but not between CD4 and LCK, substantially increases upon TÂ cell maturation. As a result, peripheral CD8+ TÂ cells are more self-reactive than CD4+ TÂ cells. The different levels of self-reactivity of mature CD8+ and CD4+ TÂ cells likely reflect the unique roles of these subsets in immunity. These results indicate that the evolutionary selection pressure tuned the CD4-LCK and CD8-LCK stoichiometries, as they represent the unique parts of the proximal TÂ cell receptor (TCR) signaling pathway, which differ between CD4+ and CD8+ TÂ cells.
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