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      Negative selection--clearing out the bad apples from the T-cell repertoire.

      Nature reviews. Immunology
      Apoptosis, Cell Death, Clonal Deletion, Models, Immunological, Signal Transduction, T-Lymphocytes, immunology, Thymus Gland, cytology

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          Abstract

          Dead cells are a prominent feature of the thymic landscape as only 5% of developing thymocytes are exported as mature T cells. The remaining thymocytes die by one of two mechanisms; most thymocytes die because they are not positively selected and do not receive a survival signal, whereas a minority of thymocytes undergo T-cell receptor (TCR)-mediated apoptosis, a process known as negative selection. Negative selection is extremely important for establishing a functional immune system, as it provides an efficient mechanism for ridding the T-cell repertoire of self-reactive and potentially autoimmune lymphocytes. This review discusses several cellular and molecular aspects of negative selection.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          12766760
          10.1038/nri1085

          Chemistry
          Apoptosis,Cell Death,Clonal Deletion,Models, Immunological,Signal Transduction,T-Lymphocytes,immunology,Thymus Gland,cytology

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