Published online 17 January 2006 doi:10.1084/jem.20051886
Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1007 $8.00
JEM, Volume 203, Number 1, 47-52
Stoichiometry of the murine 
T cell receptor
Sandra M. Hayes and
Paul E. Love
Laboratory of Mammalian Genes and Development, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892
CORRESPONDENCE Sandra M. Hayes: hayessa{at}upstate.edu
The T cell receptor for antigen (TCR) complex is organized into two functional domains: the antigen-binding clonotypic heterodimer and the signal-transducing invariant CD3 and TCR
chains. In most vertebrates, there are two different clonotypic heterodimers (TCR
ß and TCR
) that define the
ß and 
T cell lineages, respectively.
ß- and 
TCRs also differ in their invariant chain subunit composition, in that
ßTCRs contain CD3
and CD3
dimers, whereas 
TCRs contain only CD3
dimers. This difference in subunit composition of the
ß- and 
TCRs raises the question of whether the stoichiometries of these receptor complexes are different. As the stoichiometry of the murine 
TCR has not been previously investigated, we used two quantitative immunofluorescent approaches to determine the valency of TCR
heterodimers and CD3
dimers in surface murine 
TCR complexes. Our results support a model of murine 
TCR stoichiometry in which there are two CD3
dimers for every TCR
heterodimer.
The multimeric TCR is composed of an antigen-binding clonotypic heterodimer (TCR
ß or TCR
) and a signal-transducing complex, consisting of the CD3 dimers (CD3
and/or CD3
) and a TCR
homodimer. TCR signaling is required for lineage commitment and repertoire selection during development, for maintenance of the peripheral T cell pool, and for differentiation of naive T cells into effector and memory cell populations during an immune response. Despite the fact that many of the components of the TCR-coupled signaling pathways have been elucidated, it is not precisely known how these signaling events are initially triggered. Two models have been proposed to provide a mechanism for the initiation of TCR signal transduction, with each implicating a distinct stoichiometry for the TCR (for reviews see references 1 and 2). In the first model, the surface TCR complex contains one TCR heterodimer, two CD3 dimers, and one TCR
homodimer (36). According to this monovalent TCR model, ligand engagement would initiate signaling by conformational changes in the subunits and/or by oligomerization of individual TCR complexes. The second model, known as the bivalent TCR model, proposes that the surface TCR complex contains two clonotypic heterodimers, two CD3 dimers, and one TCR
homodimer (710). Triggering of the bivalent TCR complex may still require a conformational change in the subunits, but the presence of two TCR heterodimers within a single TCR complex would preclude the need for receptor oligomerization.
Most studies of TCR stoichiometry have been performed on the
ßTCR and, consequently, little is known about the stoichiometry of 
TCR. We recently provided evidence to suggest that the stoichiometry of the 
TCR differs from that of the
ßTCR. Specifically, whereas
ßTCRs contain both CD3
and CD3
dimers, most 
TCRs were found to contain only CD3
dimers (11). However, these experiments did not resolve whether one or two CD3
dimers are incorporated into the fully assembled 
TCR complex. Interestingly, signal transduction by the 
TCR was shown to be superior to that of the
ßTCR after cross-linking of CD3 alone (11). A multivalent 
TCR complex could explain this enhanced signaling capacity of the 
TCR. To determine the stoichiometry of the 
TCR, we developed two quantitative immunofluorescence techniques to measure (a) the ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
heterodimers and (b) the relative percentage of CD3
dimers on the surface of polyclonal 
T cells. In this paper, we report findings that favor a monovalent model for 
TCR stoichiometry.
 |
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
|
|---|
Quantifying the ratio of CD3
dimers to TCR
heterodimers on the surface of murine 
T cells
There are three possible models for the stoichiometry of the murine 
TCR. Two of these (Fig. 1, A and B) are based on the present models proposed for the stoichiometry of the
ßTCR. The configuration in Fig. 1 A is based on the monovalent
ßTCR model (36) and depicts the surface 
TCR complex with one TCR
heterodimer, two CD3
dimers, and one TCR
homodimer, for a total of eight subunits. The configuration in Fig. 1 B is based on the alternative bivalent
ßTCR model (710) and depicts the surface 
TCR complex with 2 TCR
heterodimers, 2 CD3
dimers, and 1 TCR
homodimer, for a total of 10 subunits. It is also conceivable that the rules of 
TCR assembly and surface expression differ from those of the
ßTCR, such that a 
TCR complex containing only one CD3
dimer is transported to and stably expressed on the cell surface. This surface complex would contain one TCR
heterodimer, one CD3
dimer, and one TCR
homodimer, for a total of six subunits (Fig. 1 C). As the CD3
/TCR
ratio varies in the configurations shown in Fig. 1, quantifying this ratio is the first step in solving the stoichiometry of the murine 
TCR. To this end, we developed a flow cytometric approach similar to those used by others to quantify the CD3
/TCR ratio on primary mouse and human T cells (4, 12). This method takes advantage of the fact that the mAbs against CD3
/
dimers (2C11) and TCR
heterodimers (GL3, GL4, UC7-13D5, and UC3-10A6) are all hamster IgG antibodies containing
light chains. As each primary antibody can be detected with the same antihamster Ig
secondary antibody, the relative expression levels of CD3 dimers and TCR
heterodimers on the surface of 
T cells can be measured if saturating amounts of mAb are used. Our approach differs from those of previous studies in that we used a monoclonal antihamster antibody instead of polyclonal antihamster IgG antibodies, thereby restricting recognition to a single epitope on each primary antibody. A representative staining profile for anti-CD3
/
(2C11) and two anti-TCR
(GL3 and UC7-13D5) mAbs on gated CD4CD8CD19 LN cells from TCRß/ mice is shown in Fig. 2 A. Note that the relative fluorescence of 2C11 mAb staining is approximately twice that of anti-TCR
mAb staining, regardless of which anti-TCR
mAb was used (GL3, GL4, UC7-13D5, or UC3-10A6; Fig. 2, A and B). These results indicate that there are two CD3 dimers for every TCR
heterodimer on the surface of 
T cells. Importantly, loss of CD3
expression does not affect this ratio, because we also observed two CD3 dimers for every TCR
heterodimer on the surface of CD4CD8 TCRßCD19 LN cells from CD3
/ mice (Fig. 2 B). This finding is consistent with previous results demonstrating that neither TCR
nor TCR
pairs efficiently to a CD3
dimer (11). The observed 2:1 ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
heterodimers favors the monovalent TCR model shown in Fig. 1 A, in which there is one TCR
heterodimer and two CD3 dimers in each 
TCR complex. Thus, our findings indicate that the 
TCR has a signal transducing complex that is similar to that of the
ßTCR, in that it contains two CD3 dimers.

View larger version (32K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2. Comparison of CD3 and TCR surface levels on murine  T cells. (A) Histogram showing the relative fluorescence of 2C11, GL3, and UC7-13D5 (UC7) mAb staining on gated CD4CD8CD19 LN cells from TCRß/ mice. The 2C11 mAb (dark gray line) recognizes both CD3 and CD3 dimers, and the GL3 (bold line) and UC7 (light gray line) mAbs recognize TCR heterodimers. Staining with a hamster isotype control is also shown (shaded histogram). The number in parentheses represents the mean fluorescence intensity for each mAb minus that of the hamster isotype control. (B) Ratio of CD3 /TCR (for calculation information see Materials and methods) for each anti-TCR mAb on the surface of CD4CD8CD19 LN cells from TCRß/ mice (GL3, n = 10; GL4, n = 3; UC7, n = 10; UC3, n = 3) and CD4CD8TCRßCD19 LN cells from CD3 / mice (GL3, n = 8; GL4, n = 4; UC7, n = 8; UC3, n = 3). Bars represent the means ± standard deviation.
| |
Quantifying the relative percentage of CD3
dimers on the surface of murine 
T cells
Biochemical analysis suggests that a small percentage of surface 
TCR complexes contain CD3
dimers (11, 13). The 
TCRs that contain CD3
dimers could be restricted to a distinct subpopulation of 
T cells or may represent a minor subset of TCRs on each 
T cell. To discern between these two possibilities, we developed a second flow cytometric assay that uses an anti-CD3
mAb (7D6), which has been reported to block the binding of the 2C11 mAb to CD3
dimers but not to CD3
dimers (14). To confirm the specificity of the 7D6 mAb and its ability to block 2C11 mAb staining of CD3
dimers, we assayed double-negative (DN) thymocytes from CD3
/, CD3
/, and CD3
/ mice (Fig. 3 A). The 7D6 mAb detected the intracellular CD3
dimers present in CD3
/ DN thymocytes but not the intracellular CD3
dimers present in CD3
/ DN thymocytes. In addition, pretreatment with the 7D6 mAb completely blocked 2C11 mAb staining of intracellular CD3
dimers in CD3
/ DN thymocytes but had no effect on 2C11 mAb staining of intracellular CD3
dimers in CD3
/ DN thymocytes. Next, we tested the efficacy of this flow cytometric approach. We first assayed 
T cells from CD3
/ mice, which express only CD3
dimers on their cell surface (13), and found that the 7D6 mAb was indeed able to completely block 2C11 mAb surface staining (Fig. 3 B). We then assayed CD4+
ß T cells from B6 mice, which express both CD3
and CD3
dimers on their cell surface (for review see reference 15) and found, as expected, that the 7D6 mAb only partially blocked 2C11 mAb surface staining (Fig. 3 B). If expression of 
TCRs containing CD3
dimers were limited to a subpopulation of 
T cells, then pretreatment with purified 7D6 mAb should partially block 2C11 staining on this CD3
+ subset and completely block 2C11 staining on the CD3
subset. However, if CD3
containing 
TCRs were a minor subset of TCRs expressed on each 
T cell, then pretreatment with purified 7D6 mAb should almost completely block 2C11 staining on all 
T cells. We found that when 
T cells from TCRß/ mice were assayed, the 7D6 mAb almost completely blocked the staining of the 2C11 mAb, indicating that the TCRs containing CD3
dimers represent a minor subset of TCRs expressed on each 
T cell (Fig. 3 B). In fact, the relative percentage of CD3
dimers was calculated to be 99.2 ± 0.1% of all CD3 dimers.
CD3
is absolutely required for the assembly and expression of the 
TCR
If two CD3
dimers are found in each surface 
TCR complex, then the loss of CD3
should have profound effects on 
TCR assembly and surface expression. Indeed, Haks et al. have reported that 
T cell development is severely affected in CD3
/ mice (16). We sought to expand these earlier experiments by performing a more detailed analysis of 
TCR surface expression on thymocytes and splenocytes from CD3
/ mice and from CD3
/ mice carrying a 
TCR transgene. Virtually no 
TCR+ cells were detected in the thymus and spleen of CD3
/ mice (Fig. 4, A and B). Moreover, introduction of a 
TCR transgene into CD3
/ mice did not increase the number of 
TCR+ thymocytes and splenocytes as it does when introduced into CD3
+/+ mice, indicating that the absence of 
TCR+ cells in CD3
/ mice cannot solely be caused by a failure to express productively rearranged TCR
and -
genes (Fig. 4 A). These findings demonstrate that 
TCR assembly and surface expression are absolutely dependent on the presence of CD3
. Remarkably, unlike the 
TCR, the
ßTCR can still be expressed on the surface of CD3
/ thymocytes and splenocytes, albeit at reduced levels compared with CD3
+/+ cells (Fig. 4 C) (16). Therefore, CD3
/ mice reveal a difference in the requirement for CD3
in
ß- and 
TCR assembly and surface expression. Importantly, this difference is consistent with the supposition that TCR
and -
chains each pair with a CD3
dimer but not a CD3
dimer.
Concluding remarks
Using quantitative immunofluorescence techniques, we have addressed the issue of murine 
TCR stoichiometry. We observed a 2:1 ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
heterodimers on the surface of peripheral 
T cells, a ratio that supports the monovalent TCR model (Fig. 1 A). We also present new evidence, in accordance with previously reported biochemical data (11, 13), demonstrating that the two CD3 dimers contained within the 
TCR are almost exclusively CD3
dimers. Lastly, an analysis of 
TCR surface expression on CD3
/ thymocytes and splenocytes revealed an absolute requirement for CD3
dimers in 
TCR assembly. Together, these data strongly support the idea that, during 
TCR assembly, both TCR
and TCR
pair with a CD3
dimer. In this study, the ratio of TCR
homodimers to CD3 dimers or TCR
heterodimers was not measured and, therefore, the number of TCR
homodimers contained within a surface 
TCR complex cannot be determined. However, based on the conservation of positively charged residues in the transmembrane regions of all four TCR chains that are required for association with the invariant TCR chains (for review see reference 15), we propose that, like the
ßTCR, the 
TCR contains one TCR
homodimer.
The vast majority of murine 
TCRs, whether expressed on naive or activated 
T cells, contain only CD3
dimers (Fig. 3 and not depicted) (11, 13). It is not clear, however, whether human 
TCRs share the same bias for CD3
dimers. Biochemical analysis of surface 
TCR complexes on primary human 
T cells detected some CD3
dimers but considerably less than the amount observed in surface
ßTCR complexes on primary human
ß T cells (11). Interestingly, biochemical analysis of surface 
TCR complexes on activated and expanded human 
T cell clones detected CD3
dimers in amounts comparable to those seen in surface
ßTCRs (unpublished data) (17). Unfortunately, CD3
deficiency in humans does not resolve the issue of whether CD3
is required for human 
TCR surface expression, because it is not known whether the absence of peripheral 
T cells (18, 19) is caused by the loss of CD3
or by the markedly reduced levels of the other invariant subunits that accompany CD3
deficiency in the patients analyzed (18). Nevertheless, these findings suggest that there may be important differences in the subunit requirements for murine and human 
TCR assembly. It is believed, based on sequence homology, that TCR
is the counterpart to TCR
and, consequently, that TCR
should pair preferentially with CD3
dimers (for review see reference 15). Accordingly, the inconsistency in murine and human 
TCR assembly can be explained by a difference in either the binding affinities of the respective TCR
chains for CD3
dimers or the binding affinities of the respective CD3
dimers for TCR
chains. Murine TCR
pairs to a CD3
dimer but not to a CD3
dimer (Figs. 2 and 3) (11, 13). However, this is not the case for human TCR
, as a metabolic labeling study using TCR
ß Jurkat cells transfected with a human TCR
gene shows that human TCR
can associate with either human CD3
or CD3
(20). Remarkably, in the same study, when a murine TCR
gene was transfected into the TCR
ß Jurkat variant, the murine TCR
was also shown to pair with either human CD3
or CD3
. Collectively, these data indicate that murine and human CD3
dimers differ in their ability to bind to TCR
chains.
Of the current models of TCR stoichiometry, the observed 2:1 ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
heterodimers favors the monovalent TCR model for 
TCR stoichiometry (Fig. 1 A). However, we cannot rule out the possibility that monovalent 
TCR complexes cluster or aggregate on the cell surface to form higher order complexes. If these higher order complexes exist, they may provide an explanation for how signal transduction by the 
TCR is superior to that of the
ßTCR in the absence of coreceptor involvement. The difference in the subunit composition of the
ß- and 
TCR signal transducing complexes may also explain the increased signaling proficiency of the 
TCR. As the amino acid sequence of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif in each CD3 chain is unique (for review see reference 21), it is conceivable that
ß- and 
TCR complexes recruit distinct signaling molecules. In addition, or alternatively, intrinsic differences in the signaling pathways coupled to
ß- and 
TCRs may provide a mechanism by which the 
TCR is capable of signaling better than the
ßTCR.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS
|
|---|
Mice.
B6.129P2-TCRß/ (TCRß/) mice (22) were purchased from the Jackson Laboratory. C57BL/6-CD3
/ (CD3
/) mice (23) were provided by D. Kappes (Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, PA), and 129-CD3
/ (CD3
/) mice (16) were provided by D. Wiest (Fox Chase Cancer Center). C57BL/6-V
6/V
1 
TCR transgenic (Tg) mice (line 134) (24) were provided by B.J. Fowlkes (National Institutes of Health [NIH], Bethesda, MD). B6.129-CD3
/ (CD3
/) (25) and C57BL/6 (B6) mice were generated in our colony. Mice were bred and maintained in an NIH Research Animal Facility in accordance with the specifications of the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care. Mouse protocols were approved by the NIH Animal Care and Use Committee. All mice were killed at 812 wk of age.
Antibodies and reagents.
mAbs used for flow cytometric analysis included anti-CD4 (RM4-5), anti-CD8
(53-6.7), anti-TCR
(GL3, GL4, and UC7-13D5), anti-V
4 (UC3-10A6), anti-TCRß (H57-597), anti-CD3
(145-2C11), anti-CD19 (1D3), and a hamster IgG isotype control, all of which were purchased from BD Biosciences. The secondary reagent, biotin-conjugated antihamster Ig
(HIG-29), was also purchased from BD Biosciences. The anti-CD3
(7D6) hybridoma (14) was obtained from A. Singer (NIH, Bethesda, MD) and D. Wiest and was used to produce ascites. Protein A/Gpurified 7D6 mAb was conjugated to AlexaFluor 488 according to the manufacturer's instructions (Invitrogen). AlexaFluor 488 conjugated to streptavidin was also purchased from Invitrogen.
Flow cytometry.
Flow cytometric analysis for surface antigens was performed as previously described (26). Intracellular staining for CD3 dimers was performed (Cytofix/Cytoperm kit; BD Biosciences) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
heterodimers was determined using an assay previously described for determining the ratio of CD3 dimers to TCR
ß heterodimers (4, 12). In brief, 1.5 x 106 lymph node cells were incubated with saturating amounts of purified anti-TCR
(GL3, GL4, UC7-13D5, or UC3-10A6) and anti-CD3
(145-2C11) mAbs for 30 min on ice. Saturating amounts of antibody are defined as the concentration of purified antibody required to completely block the binding of the same antibody conjugated to a fluorochrome. All five mAbs are hamster IgG that use the Ig
light chain. Accordingly, their relative binding intensities can be assayed using saturating amounts of the same antihamster secondary mAb, biotin-conjugated antihamster Ig
(HIG-29). The CD3
/TCR
ratio was calculated using the following equation, where MFI stands for mean fluorescence intensity:
 |
The relative percentage of CD3
dimers in CD3 dimers on the surface of 
T cells was determined using saturating amounts of anti-CD3
(7D6; 300 µg/ml for intracellular staining and 200 µg/ml for surface staining) mAb to block the binding of CD3
dimers by anti-CD3
(145-2C11) mAb (14). The percentage of CD3
dimers was calculated using the following equation:
For all experiments, 24 x 105 cells were collected (FACSCalibur; Becton Dickinson) using CellQuest software or LSR II using FACSDiva software (BD Immunocytometry Systems) and analyzed using FlowJo software (Tree Star, Inc.). Dead cells were excluded from analysis based on forward and side scatter profiles.
 |
Acknowledgments
|
|---|
We thank Dalal El-Khoury for excellent technical assistance. We also thank Drs. Dietmar Kappes, B.J. Fowlkes, and David Wiest for mice, and Drs. Alfred Singer and David Wiest for the 7D6 hybridoma.
The authors have no conflicting financial interests.
Submitted: 19 September 2005
Accepted: 20 December 2005
 |
References
|
|---|
1 Alarcón, B., D. Gil, P. Delgado, and W.W. Schamel. 2003. Initiation of TCR signaling: regulation with CD3 dimers. Immunol. Rev. 191:3846.[CrossRef][Medline]
2 Call, M.E., and K.W. Wucherpfennig. 2005. The T cell receptor: critical role of the membrane environment in receptor assembly and function. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 23:101126.[CrossRef][Medline]
3 Manolios, N., F. Letourneur, J.S. Bonifacino, and R.D. Klausner. 1991. Pairwise, cooperative and inhibitory interactions describe the assembly and probable structure of the T-cell antigen receptor. EMBO J. 10:16431651.[Medline]
4 Punt, J.A., J.L. Roberts, K.P. Kearse, and A. Singer. 1994. Stoichiometry of the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) complex: each TCR/CD3 complex contains one TCR
, one TCRß, and two CD3
chains. J. Exp. Med. 180:587593.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
5 Kearse, K.P., J.L. Roberts, and A. Singer. 1995. TCR
-CD3
association is the initial step in
ß dimer formation in murine T cells and is limiting in immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes. Immunity. 2:391399.[CrossRef][Medline]
6 Call, M.E., J. Pyrdol, M. Wiedmann, and K.W. Wucherpfennig. 2002. The organizing principle in the formation of the T cell receptor-CD3 complex. Cell. 111:967979.[CrossRef][Medline]
7 Exley, M., T. Wileman, B. Mueller, and C. Terhorst. 1995. Evidence for multivalent structure of T-cell antigen receptor complex. Mol. Immunol. 32:829839.[CrossRef][Medline]
8 Jacobs, H. 1997. Pre-TCR/CD3 and TCR/CD3 complexes: decamers with differential signaling properties? Immunol. Today. 18:565569.[Medline]
9 San Jose, E., A.G. Sahuquillo, R. Bragado, and B. Alarcón. 1998. Assembly of the TCR/CD3 complex: CD3
/
and CD3
/
dimers associate indistinctly with both TCR
and ß chains. Evidence for a double TCR heterodimer model. Eur. J. Immunol. 28:1221.[CrossRef][Medline]
10 Fernandez-Miguel, G., B. Alarcón, A. Iglesias, H. Bluethmann, M. Alvarez-Mon, E. Sanz, and A. de la Hera. 1999. Multivalent structure of an
ß T cell receptor. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 96:15471552.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
11 Hayes, S.M., and P.E. Love. 2002. Distinct structure and signaling potential of the 
TCR complex. Immunity. 16:827838.[CrossRef][Medline]
12 Thibault, G., and P. Bardos. 1995. Compared TCR and CD3
expression on
ß and 
T cells. Evidence for the association of two TCR heterodimers with three CD3
chains in the TCR/CD3 complex. J. Immunol. 154:38143820.[Abstract]
13 Hayes, S.M., K. Laky, D. El-Khoury, D.J. Kappes, B.J. Fowlkes, and P.E. Love. 2002. Activation-induced modification in the CD3 complex of the 
T cell receptor. J. Exp. Med. 196:13551361.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
14 Coulie, P.G., C. Uyttenhove, P. Wauters, N. Manolios, R.D. Klausner, L.E. Samelson, and J. van Snick. 1991. Identification of a murine monoclonal antibody specific for an allotypic determinant on mouse CD 3. Eur. J. Immunol. 21:17031709.[Medline]
15 Klausner, R.D., J. Lippincott-Schwartz, and J.S. Bonifacino. 1990. The T cell antigen receptor: insights into organelle biology. Annu. Rev. Cell Biol. 6:403431.[CrossRef][Medline]
16 Haks, M.C., P. Krimpenfort, J. Borst, and A.M. Kruisbeek. 1998. The CD3
chain is essential for development of both the TCR
ß and TCR
lineages. EMBO J. 17:18711882.[CrossRef][Medline]
17 Van Neerven, J., J.E. Coligan, and F. Koning. 1990. Structural comparison of
ß and 
T cell receptor-CD3 complexes reveals identical subunit interactions but distinct cross-linking patterns of T cell receptor chains. Eur. J. Immunol. 20:21052111.[Medline]
18 Dadi, H.K., A.J. Simon, and C.M. Roifman. 2003. Effect of CD3
deficiency on maturation of
/ß and
/
T-cell lineages in severe combined immunodeficiency. N. Engl. J. Med. 349:18211828.[Free Full Text]
19 de Saint Basile, G., F. Geissmann, E. Flori, B. Uring-Lambert, C. Soudais, M. Cavazzana-Calvo, A. Durandy, N. Jabado, A. Fischer, and F. Le Deist. 2004. Severe combined immunodeficiency caused by deficiency in either the
or
subunit of CD 3. J. Clin. Invest. 114:15121517.[CrossRef][Medline]
20 Alibaud, L., J. Arnaud, R. Llobera, and B. Rubin. 2001. On the role of CD3
chains in TCR
/CD3 complexes during assembly and membrane expression. Scand. J. Immunol. 54:155162.[CrossRef][Medline]
21 Love, P.E., and E.W. Shores. 2000. ITAM multiplicity and thymocyte selection: how low can you go? Immunity. 12:591597.[CrossRef][Medline]
22 Mombaerts, P., E. Mizoguchi, M.J. Grusby, L.H. Glimcher, A.K. Bhan, and S. Tonegawa. 1993. Spontaneous development of inflammatory bowel disease in T cell receptor mutant mice. Cell. 75:274282.[Medline]
23 Dave, V.P., Z. Cao, C. Browne, B. Alarcon, G. Fernandez-Miguel, J. Lafaille, A. de la Hera, S. Tonegawa, and D.J. Kappes. 1997. CD3
deficiency arrests development of the
ß but not 
T cell lineage. EMBO J. 16:13601370.[CrossRef][Medline]
24 Sim, G.-K., C. Olsson, and A. Augustin. 1995. Commitment and maintenance of the
ß and 
T cell lineages. J. Immunol. 154:58215831.[Abstract]
25 DeJarnette, J.B., C.L. Sommers, K. Huang, K.J. Woodside, R. Emmons, K. Katz, E.W. Shores, and P.E. Love. 1998. Specific requirement for CD3
in T cell development. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 95:1490914914.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
26 Shores, E.W., M. Ono, T. Kawabe, C.L. Sommers, T. Tran, K. Lui, M.C. Udey, J. Ravetch, and P.E. Love. 1998. T cell development in mice lacking all T cell receptor
family members (
,
, and Fc
RI
). J. Exp. Med. 187:10931101.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Reddit
Technorati
Twitter What's this?
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Chen, Y., Shao, L., Ali, Z., Cai, J., Chen, Z. W.
(2008). NSOM/QD-based nanoscale immunofluorescence imaging of antigen-specific T-cell receptor responses during an in vivo clonal V{gamma}2V{delta}2 T-cell expansion. Blood
111: 4220-4232
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Siegers, G. M., Swamy, M., Fernandez-Malave, E., Minguet, S., Rathmann, S., Guardo, A. C., Perez-Flores, V., Regueiro, J. R., Alarcon, B., Fisch, P., Schamel, W. W.A.
(2007). Different composition of the human and the mouse {gamma}{delta} T cell receptor explains different phenotypes of CD3{gamma} and CD3{delta} immunodeficiencies. JEM
204: 2537-2544
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Bello, R., Feito, M. J., Ojeda, G., Portoles, P., Rojo, J. M.
(2007). Loss of N-terminal Charged Residues of Mouse CD3{epsilon} Chains Generates Isoforms Modulating Antigen T Cell Receptor-mediated Signals and T Cell Receptor-CD3 Interactions. J. Biol. Chem.
282: 22324-22334
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
-
Recio, M. J., Moreno-Pelayo, M. A., Kilic, S. S., Guardo, A. C., Sanal, O., Allende, L. M., Perez-Flores, V., Mencia, A., Modamio-Hoybjor, S., Seoane, E., Regueiro, J. R.
(2007). Differential Biological Role of CD3 Chains Revealed by Human Immunodeficiencies. J. Immunol.
178: 2556-2564
[Abstract]
[Full Text]