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International Immunology, Vol. 12, No. 3, 263-270, March 2000
© 2000 Japanese Society for Immunology

TCR Vß repertoire restriction and lack of CDR3 conservation implicate TCR–superantigen interactions in promoting the clonal evolution of murine thymic lymphomas

Gregorio Gomez1,4, Kimberly Z. Clarkin2, Ellen Kraig2, Anthony J. Infante3 and Ellen R. Richie1

1 Department of Carcinogenesis, and
2 Department of Cellular and Structural Biology, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78724, USA
3 Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78724, USA

Correspondence to: E. Richie

Thymic lymphoma development is a multistage process in which genetic and epigenetic events cooperate in the emergence of a malignant clone. The notion that signaling via TCR–ligand interactions plays a role in promoting the expansion of developing neoplastic clones is a matter of debate. To investigate this issue, we determined the TCR Vß repertoire of thymic lymphomas induced in AKR/J mice by either endogenous retroviruses or the carcinogen, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU). Both spontaneous and MNU-induced lymphomas displayed restricted Vß repertoires. However, whereas Vß6, Vß8 and Vß9 were expressed by a greater than expected frequency of MNU-induced lymphomas, Vß8, Vß7, Vß13 and Vß14 were over-represented on spontaneous lymphomas. The dissimilar TCR Vß profiles indicate that different endogenous ligands promote neoplastic clonal expansion in untreated and MNU-treated mice. Although the nature of these ligands is not clear, the lack of conservation in TCR ß chain CDR3 regions among lymphomas that express the same Vß segment suggests that endogenous superantigens (SAG), as opposed to conventional peptide ligands, are likely to be involved in the selection process. The biased representation of lymphomas expressing Vß6-, Vß7- and Vß9-containing TCRs that recognize endogenous SAG is consistent with this hypothesis. The finding that Bcl-2 is expressed at high levels in spontaneous and MNU-induced lymphomas suggests that preneoplastic thymocytes may be resistant to SAG-induced clonal deletion. A working model is presented in which preneoplastic clones expressing TCRs that recognize endogenous SAG are selectively expanded as a consequence of sustained TCR-mediated signaling.

Keywords: AKR, J, Bcl-2, carcinogenesis, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, thymocyte

4 Present address: Building 10, Room 11N256, LI/NIAID/NIH, 10 Center Drive, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA

Transmitting editor: J. P. Allison


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