How nonuniform contact profiles of T cell receptors modulate thymic selection outcomes
Hanrong Chen, Arup K. Chakraborty, Mehran Kardar

TL;DR
This paper explores how nonuniform contact profiles of T cell receptors influence thymic selection, revealing that contact variability affects amino acid enrichment and T cell repertoire diversity through analytical and simulation methods.
Contribution
It introduces a model incorporating nonuniform TCR contact profiles into thymic selection, extending previous theories to better match experimental observations.
Findings
Contact profiles modulate amino acid enrichment in TCRs.
Nonuniform contacts influence the diversity of the T cell repertoire.
Analytical and simulation results show position-dependent effects of contact variability.
Abstract
T cell receptors (TCRs) bind foreign or self-peptides attached to major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, and the strength of this interaction determines T cell activation. Optimizing the ability of T cells to recognize a diversity of foreign peptides yet be tolerant of self-peptides is crucial for the adaptive immune system to properly function. This is achieved by selection of T cells in the thymus, where immature T cells expressing unique, stochastically generated TCRs interact with a large number of self-peptide-MHC; if a TCR does not bind strongly enough to any self-peptide-MHC, or too strongly with at least one self-peptide-MHC, the T cell dies. Past theoretical work cast thymic selection as an extreme value problem, and characterized the statistical enrichment or depletion of amino acids in the post-selection TCR repertoire, showing how T cells are selected to be able…
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Taxonomy
TopicsT-cell and B-cell Immunology · Immune Cell Function and Interaction · Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research
