Thymic‐Shared Antigen‐1 (TSA‐1) A Lymphostromal Cell Membrane Ly‐6 Superfamily Molecule with a Putative Role in Cellular Adhesion
Author(s) -
Brendan J. Classon,
Richard L. Boyd
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of immunology research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2314-8861
pISSN - 2314-7156
DOI - 10.1155/1998/53157
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , cell adhesion , antigen , immunoglobulin superfamily , cell adhesion molecule , superfamily , adhesion , chemistry , biology , cell , immunology , biochemistry , gene , organic chemistry
The seeding and colonization of the thymus by bone marrow stem cells and the maturation of these cells into mature T lymphocytes are dependent on cell-surface recognition events between different cell lineages within the thymic microenvironment. Positive and negative selection processes within the thymus produce a peripheral T-cell repertoire capable of recognizing peptides derived from foreign antigen bound to self MHCmolecules. In addition to the TCR/MHC-peptide interaction, many other cell-surface molecules act in concert to regulate the kinetics of cellular interactions and intracellular signaling events during thymopoiesis. We have investigated the complexity of the thymic stroma by using monoclonal antibodies to clone cell-membrane molecules of thymic stromal cells. Thymic-shared antigen-1 (TSA-1) is a molecule of interest because it is expressed by both immature thymocytes and stromal cells. We report herein the structural and evolutionary relationships between TSA-1 and molecules of the Ly-6 superfamily (Ly-6SF), and present evidence that TSA-1 functions as a cell-surface receptor by binding a cognate cell target molecule on the surface of a subset of thymocytes.
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