#Mechanism of T cell self/non-self'education'The immune system discriminates between self and non-self and responds specifically to remove non-self pathogens invading our body. T cells play a central role in the immune response to non-self pathogens. The T-cell repertoire is shaped by"education"that occurs in the thymus. A huge number of immature T cells, each of which can recognize a single antigen, are generated first, and these immature T cells are sorted out through positive selection, which keeps potentially useful cells able to detect non-self pathogens alive, and negative selection, which kills self-reactive cells. The research group has revealed previously that the thymoproteasome, a protease complex exclusively expressed in the thymus, plays a pivotal role in positive selection. However, how the thymoproteasome governs positive selection was understood not. The research group of Professor Shigeo Murata at the University of Tokyo Graduate school of Pharmaceutical Sciences used mass spectroscopy, capable of identifying unknown substances, and found that the thymoproteasome produces peptides with unique sequence motifs that are produced not by other types of proteasomes and clarified that the unique peptides efficiently induce the positive selection of immature T cells and thus promote differentiation to killer T cells.""This research is significant in that it demonstrates for the first time the molecular mechanism of the first step of positive selection and may provide clues to the development of therapies for infectious diseases, cancers and immune diseases.,""says Professor Murata a
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