The T-cell Receptor as Immunoglobulin: Paradigm Regained

1997 
AbstractThe quest to determine the molecular nature of T-lymphocyte receptors for antigen was a “holy grail” to immunologists for over 25 years. This paper updates a review written 15 years ago (Marchalonis JJ, Hunt JC. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med 171:127-145, 1982), which proposed that “these molecules apparently do not bear determinants specified by the major histocompatibility complex, but express Ig-related variable regions and constant regions unique to T-cell products”. We review subsequent contributions from molecular biology, protein chemistry, peptide immunochemistry, and structural biology establishing that T-cell receptors (TCRs) are members of the immunoglobulin family restricted to T cells that share 3-dimensional structural features, sequence homology, antigenic cross-reactivity, and common mechanisms of diversification with conventional immunoglobulins. These molecules and their light-and heavy-chain siblings appeared contemporaneously in vertebrate evolution with the emergence of sharks. We illu...
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