High TCR Degeneracy Enhances Antiviral Efficacy of HTLV-1-Specific CTLs by Targeting Variant Viruses in HAM Patients
Ryuji Kubota, Kousuke Hanada, Mineki Saito, Mika Dozono, Satoshi Nozuma, Hiroshi Takashima

TL;DR
This study shows that T-cells with a broad recognition ability are more effective at controlling a virus in patients with a specific neurological disease.
Contribution
The first systematic quantification of TCR degeneracy in HTLV-1-specific CTLs and its link to viral control in HAM patients.
Findings
High TCR degeneracy is inversely correlated with HTLV-1 proviral load.
Degenerate TCRs exert stronger selective pressure on the virus, leading to more nonsynonymous substitutions.
TCR degeneracy is positively linked to the recognition of epitope variants.
Abstract
T-cell receptors (TCRs) exhibit degeneracy, enabling individual TCRs to recognize multiple altered peptide ligands (APLs) derived from a single cognate antigen. This characteristic has been involved in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases through cross-reactivity between microbial and self-antigens. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), which recognize peptide–MHC class I complexes via TCRs, play a critical role in the immune response against viral infections. However, the extent to which TCR degeneracy within a population of virus-specific CTLs contributes to effective viral control remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the magnitude and functional relevance of TCR degeneracy in CTLs targeting an immunodominant epitope of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) in patients with HTLV-1-associated myelopathy (HAM). Using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsT-cell and Retrovirus Studies · Immune Cell Function and Interaction · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology
