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1.
The specificities of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) were studied for the analysis of CTL against tumor-specific cell surface antigen(s) (TSSA) of non-virus-producing tumor cells induced by the Schmidt-Ruppin strain of Rous sarcoma virus (SR-RSV) in B10 congenic and recombinant mice. Eight CTL clones were established from immune spleen cells of B10.A(5R) mice. These clones demonstrated six patterns of cytotoxic reactivity in vitro: Two clones showed H-2 restriction in tumor cell lysis. Two other clones had the capacity to lyse syngeneic, H-2K-compatible B10 and H-2-incompatible B10.A(4R) tumor cells, but not YAC-1 cells. One clone had cytotoxic activity against syngeneic, H-2D-compatible B10.D2 tumor cells and YAC-1 cells, but not against H-2-incompatible tumor cells. One clone had cytotoxic activity against syngeneic and YAC-1 tumor cells, but not against either H-2-compatible or H-2-incompatible tumor cells. One clone had lytic activity to syngeneic, H-2-compatible, H-2-incompatible, and YAC-1 tumor cells. Another clone killed H-2-incompatible B10.A(4R) tumor and YAC-1 cells, but not syngeneic or H-2-compatible tumor cells. All these clones strongly expressed surface Thy-1.2 antigens, whereas the expression of Lyt-1.2 and Lyt-2.2 antigens was different from clone to clone. These results demonstrate heterogeneity of both lytic specificity and phenotype of CTL against RSV-induced mouse tumor cells, suggesting the existence of multiple antigenic sites on the RSV TSSA recognized by CTL populations.  相似文献   

2.
The T cell antigen L-tyrosine-p-azobenzenearsonate is unique in being a simple determinant that can be presented in the context of both I-A and I-E. I-E-restricted T cell clones derived from B10.A(5R) mice were found to fall into three groups: Type I clones recognized antigen only in the context of syngeneic apcs, Type II clones recognized antigen with the same highly specific major histocompatibility complex restriction but in addition proliferated in response to allogeneic stimuli; Type III clones were "degenerate" in their major histocompatibility complex-restricted recognition of antigen and proliferated when antigen-presenting cells bearing Eb beta Ek alpha (syngeneic), Ek beta Ek alpha, or Ed beta Ed alpha were used. These observations allow some conclusions to be drawn about sites on the I-E molecule that may be functionally significant in the presentation of this antigen. By using the B cell hybridoma LK35.2 as target cells, some of these T cell clones act as cytotoxic cells in the Class II-restricted manner predicted from the results of proliferative assays. Class II-restricted cytotoxicity can therefore be controlled by both I-A and I-E mouse Ir gene loci.  相似文献   

3.
The murine T cell proliferative response to the carboxyl terminal cyanogen bromide cleavage fragment 81-104 of pigeon cytochrome c (cyt) has been studied. Two interesting properties of this response have been previously described. First, T cells from B10.A mice primed with pigeon cyt 81-104 show more vigorous proliferation when restimulated with moth cyt 81-103 than when stimulated with pigeon cyt 81-104; that is, the B10.A T cell response to pigeon shows heteroclitic restimulation by moth. Second, T cells primed with the acetimidyl derivative (Am) of pigeon cyt 81-104 did not cross-react with the unmodified cyt fragments, but Am-moth cyt 81-103 still stimulated Am-pigeon cyt 81-104 primed T cells better than the Am-pigeon cyt 81-104 fragment. These results raised the issue of whether the antigenic sites on the fragments responsible for the specificity of T cell priming in vivo differed from the residues that contributed to the heteroclitic response of pigeon (or Am pigeon)-primed T cells to moth cyt c fragments. In this paper, synthetic peptide antigens were tested in order to identify which residues caused the heterocliticity of the moth fragment and which residues were involved in the antigenic differentiation of native and derivatized fragments. The heterocliticity of the T cell response to moth fragment 81-103 was found to be due to the deletion of the penultimate residue (Ala103) from the pigeon fragment. However, the ability to cause heterocliticity was not uniquely a property of this deletion. T cells from animals primed with peptides containing substitutions at positions 100 or 102 were also heteroclitically stimulated by the moth-like antigen. The observation that T cells could not be primed for recognition of the changes in peptide sequence that caused heteroclitic stimulation suggests that T cells do not directly recognize determinants in this region. The antigenically significant site of derivatization for T cell priming was found to be Lys99. Furthermore, substitution of a Gln at position 99 also resulted in elicitation of yet a third set of T cell clones specific for the presence of that residue. That is, the specificity of the primed T cell population was found to be altered by changes at residue-99, but no such alterations in specificity were demonstrable when T cells primed with peptides altered at residue-103, residue-102, or residue-100 were compared. Overall, the results demonstrate that the antigen can be divided into two functionally distinct sites that are in close physical proximity.  相似文献   

4.
The 65 kilodalton heat shock protein (Hsp65) from mycobacterial species elicits immune responses and in some cases protective immunity. Here we have used a DNA sublibrary approach to identify antigenic fragments of Mycobacterium avium Hsp65 and a synthetic peptide approach to delineate CD4+ T cell determinants. A panel of Hsp65 reactive CD4+ T cell clones was established from lymph node cells obtained from BALB/c mice immunized with recombinant Hsp65. The clones were tested for proliferative reactivity against the products of the DNA sublibrary of the hsp65 gene. A T cell epitope, restricted by the I-Ad molecule, was identified within the C-terminal region of Hsp65 and the minimal epitope (amino acid residues 489-503) delineated using overlapping peptides spanning the C-terminal fragment. Additionally, the CD4+ T cell clone recognizing this epitope also responded to native Hsp65 present in M. avium lysates by both proliferation and cytokine production, indicating that the epitope was present and processed similarly both in the native and the recombinant forms of Hsp65. This sequence identified in BALB/c mice (Hsp65 489-503) is identical in other mycobacteria, notably M. tuberculosis, M. bovis and M. leprae, suggesting the epitope may have wider application in murine models of other mycobacterial infections.  相似文献   

5.
The studies presented here investigated the relationship between T cell recognition of MHC-encoded products and non-MHC-linked Mls determinants. The first aspect addressed whether Mls-reactive T cells recognize Mls-encoded products alone or in association with MHC-encoded determinants. Initial studies used Mlsa-specific T cell clones that were generated by repeated stimulation of C57BL/6 or B10.A(5R) spleen cells with DBA/2 lymphoid cells. These clones recognized Mlsa on cells expressing MHC products of the H-2b, H-2d, and H-2k haplotypes, but not the H-2q haplotype. Thus, these cloned T cells were found to recognize Mlsa products in association with public but demonstrably polymorphic H-2 determinants. The question of whether T cell clones that were specific for self-H-2 determinants (autoreactive) or soluble antigen plus syngeneic H-2 (antigen-specific) could also be stimulated by Mlsa determinants was also addressed. A substantial proportion of the antigen-specific or autoreactive T cell clones tested were stimulated by Mlsa determinants. Furthermore, stimulation of these clones by Mlsa was H-2 restricted. The pattern of H-2-restricted recognition of Mlsa by these clones was not distinguishable from that observed in the Mlsa-specific T cell clones, nor was it influenced by the primary specificity or H-2 restriction pattern of a given clone. Although these findings provide a means of explaining the observation that Mls-reactive T cells exist at extremely high precursor frequencies, they also raise questions regarding the nature of the receptor structures which are used by a single T cell in the recognition of two or more apparently distinct stimuli.  相似文献   

6.
T cell responses to two allelic forms of the merozoite surface Ag 2 (MSA2) of Plasmodium falciparum were mapped in mice using the rMSA2 proteins, Ag 1609 which has the sequence of the FCQ27/PNG strain and Ag 1615 which has the sequence of the Indochina 1 strain. Lymph node cells of BL/10 and B10.BR mice immunized with either Ag 1609 or Ag 1615 responded to both Ag in in vitro proliferation assays. Lymph node cells of BALB/c mice did not respond. The T cell determinants recognized by the responder strains were mapped to conserved and variant regions of these Ag using overlapping synthetic peptides. The determinants recognized by each mouse strain were distinct. Marked difference in sequence between the central regions of the two rMSA2 proteins did not affect antigenic processing of the conserved N and C terminal regions. Hence lymph node cells of BL/10 mice immunized with either Ag 1615 or Ag 1609 recognized an immunodominant T cell determinant at the highly conserved N terminal end within the sequence YSNTFINNAYNMSIR (peptide 3b) and B10.BR mice similarly immunized recognized an immunodominant determinant at the highly conserved C terminal within the sequence CTDGNKENCGAATSL (peptide 23). Several peptides identified as containing immunodominant T cell determinants specific to BL/10 mice induced peptide-specific T cells in both BL/10 and B10.BR mouse strains when used as immunogens. However, the ability of the peptide-primed T cells to proliferate in response to the rMSA2 proteins was confined to BL/10 mice. An example of this was observed with peptides 3b and N (KNESKYSNTFINNAYNMSIRRSMAN). Peptide N was able to prime B10.BR and BL/10 mice for an enhanced antibody response when these mice were subsequently immunized with Ag 1615 even though Ag 1615-specific T cell proliferation was not detected in B10.BR mice primed with N. The study concluded that 1) conserved sequences such as peptide N when used in vaccines may give rise to MSA2-specific memory Th cells amenable to boosting by subsequent exposure to all parasite strains and 2) peptide priming may be a useful pathway for inducing defined memory Th cells in a wider population and for preferentially inducing T dependent over T independent responses to some malarial Ag.  相似文献   

7.
To gain insight into the nature of Mls determinants, we examined the stimulator cells responsible for the activation of inducer T cell clones by Mls determinants. Two types of clones responding to Mls determinants were identified. One type responded to purified B cells, but not to splenic adherent cells (SAC), from mice bearing Mls stimulatory determinants. The other type of Mls-reactive T cell clone, including the representative clone Ly1-N5, demonstrated a vigorous response to unfractionated spleen cells, but showed little or no response to B cells alone or to SAC alone from mice bearing the Mlsa or Mlsd stimulatory determinant. The response of these clones to Mls determinants required stimulation by two cell types. The failure of clone Ly1-N5 to respond to Mlsa-bearing B cells was reversed by the addition of SAC taken from mice bearing the Mlsa allele. In addition, SAC from mice bearing the nonstimulatory Mlsb allele could synergize with B cells from Mlsa-bearing animals. B cells were required to provide the Mlsa determinant, because the combination of Mlsa-bearing SAC and Mlsb-bearing B cells did not activate the clone. The response of clone Ly1-N5 to Mls is restricted by Ia determinants (shared by H-2b, H-2d, and H-2k haplotypes but not by the H-2q haplotype). The permissive H-2 alleles can be present either on the stimulator B cell or on the SAC. The optimal response of the clone was obtained by using B cells bearing Mlsa and the permissive Ia epitopes. However, a significant response of the clone to B cells bearing Mlsa but an inappropriate Ia (Iaq) was also seen in the presence of SAC bearing the nonstimulatory Mlsb allele but the permissive Ia epitopes.  相似文献   

8.
Nine independent pigeon cytochrome c-specific T cell clones were analyzed by using a panel of antigenic peptide analogs presented in association with three allelic IE-encoded MHC glycoproteins. Eight of the T cell clones expressed a TCR composed of a unique alpha- and beta-chain amino acid sequence, and concordantly, each of these T cell clones exhibited a unique Ag specificity. This was true for several clones which differed only in TCR V-J junctional regions. Interestingly, for a given clone, the response to some of the peptide analogs depended to a large extent on the allelic form of the presenting MHC molecule. A simple interpretation of these data would suggest that certain positions of the peptide Ag are most important for Ag-MHC molecule interactions, and that these specific interactions can influence the antigenic epitope recognized by the TCR. We suggest that an antigenic peptide binds to an MHC glycoprotein in a distinct way, but may retain a measure of flexibility.  相似文献   

9.
The B10.A T cell proliferative response to pigeon cytochrome c is mainly directed against a single antigenic determinant located at the carboxy-terminal end of the molecule. In the present experiments, we used synthetic peptide analogs of the carboxy-terminal sequence of moth cytochrome c to explore the structural requirements for antigenic potency. The minimum-sized peptide capable of stimulating a full response varied with the T cell clone, but within the limits of the biological systems studied, was shown to be moth fragment 97-103. Addition of more amino acids at the amino terminal end increased the antigenic potency in uneven increments, with a large contribution being made at residue 95. Analysis of amino acid substitutions at this position provided no evidence that it contained a residue that directly contacted the T cell receptor. Instead, good agreement with an analysis that made use of helix-coil transition theory suggested that this residue, as well as others, increased antigenic potency by contributing to the stabilization of the secondary structure of the molecule in an alpha-helical configuration. The maximum effect of chain length on antigenic potency appeared to stop at residue 93, in agreement with the theoretical analysis. However, addition of several more amino-terminal residues to residue 93 showed one additional significant increment of increased potency. This was almost entirely accounted for by a single lysine located four amino acids beyond the glutamic acid at residue 93 (approximately one turn of an alpha-helix away). To experimentally test whether alpha-helix-forming tendencies could account for the increased potency of the larger analogs, the degree of helix formation in trifluoroethanol was assessed by circular dichroism measurements. A good correlation was found between antigenic potency and percentage of alpha-helix for peptides of increasing chain length from moth 95-103 up to moth 86-90; 94-103. These results suggest that secondary structure may play an important role in determining the potency of antigenic determinants involved in the activation of T lymphocytes.  相似文献   

10.
The antigenic determinant recognized by a HLA-DPw4-restricted human T cell clone specific for rabies virus was identified by using a vaccinia-rabies nonstructural phosphoprotein recombinant virus and synthetic peptides of the sequence of rabies nonstructural Ag. These peptides were selected on the basis of three models that predict T cell epitopes. The antigenic determinant recognized by the rabies virus-specific T cell clone contained a five-amino acid segment highly homologous to a sequence found in a hepatitis B surface Ag epitope that stimulates human T cells in the context of the HLA-DPw4. A preliminary model of DPw4-restricted T cell determinants is elaborated based on a hypothesis of how the 2 alpha-helical peptides may bind to this MHC molecule. Results are further discussed in the context of the usefulness in identifying DPw4-restricted T cell epitopes for the production of synthetic vaccines because this MHC class II molecule is found with high frequency in the population.  相似文献   

11.
Previous experiments have demonstrated that the immune response of MHC congenic mice to pigeon cytochrome c is under Ir gene control. Expression of I-E-encoded gene products influences both the magnitude and fine specificity of the Th cell response to pigeon cytochrome c and phylogenetic derivatives. Results of those experiments implicate both determinant selection and repertoire selection as mechanisms of Ir gene control in this system. In this report we have compared the TCR expressed in pigeon cytochrome c-reactive Th cells from B10.A(I-Ek), B10.A(5R) (I-Eb), and B10.S(9R) (I-Es) mice. The B10.A(5R) strain is a low responder to pigeon cytochrome c, but in response to moth cytochrome c this strain produces T cells which respond to pigeon or moth cytochrome c on B10.A APC. These cells are phenotypically identical to the predominant clonal phenotype seen in the B10.A response to pigeon cytochrome c. In this report, we show that the B10.A and B10.A(5R) pigeon cytochrome c-reactive T cells express essentially identical T cell receptors. These results, coupled with recent studies reporting a relatively low affinity for I-Eb molecules by pigeon cytochrome c peptides compared with moth cytochrome c peptides, strongly argue that the immune response defect in the B10.A(5R) strain is due to a defect in Ag presentation (determinant selection). In contrast, B10.A and B10.S(9R) strains are high responders to pigeon cytochrome c. Both strains produce T cell clones which are capable of responding to cytochrome c presented by either B10.A or B10.S(9R) APC in vitro. We show that, even in T cells with this MHC restriction degeneracy, the TCR expressed in the two strains are different. Because the APC of both strains can clearly present the cytochrome c Ag, we conclude that the differential expression of the TCR in the responses is due to a T cell repertoire selection difference in the two strains. Thus, for the response to one Ag in three MHC congenic strains, there exists evidence that both determinant selection and repertoire selection can be mechanisms of Ir gene control of an immune response.  相似文献   

12.
To explore the physiologic or pathologic roles of autoreactive T cells, we examined immunological functions of several autoreactive mouse T cell clones in vitro and in vivo. All of the T cell clones were Lyt-2-, L3T4+ and showed self-I region-restricted proliferative responses (one clone was self-I-E restricted, the other clones were self-I-A restricted). One clone derived from C57BL/6 mouse and reactive to the self-I-Ab product (clone bb1-2) showed cross-reactivity to the I-Ak product. Among four such auto-Ia-reactive T cell clones examined, one clone produced fairly large amounts of interleukin 2 (IL 2) in response to syngeneic stimulator cells, and mediated help for the in vitro cytotoxic T cell (CTL) responses of syngeneic thymocytes, whereas this clone did not mediate in vitro antibody responses of syngeneic B cells. The other three clones were producers of small amounts of IL 2 and did not mediate the in vitro CTL responses. Among the three clones, clone bb1-2 showed strong regulatory function, and clone kk-1 (B10.BR origin and self-I-Ak reactive) showed weak regulatory function in vitro antibody responses of syngeneic B cells. The physiologic or pathologic roles of autoreactive T cells in vivo were explored by injecting subcutaneously clone kk-1 T cells or clone bb1-2 T cells into the footpads of the respective syngeneic mice. Clone kk-1 T cells injected into syngeneic mice elicited swelling of the footpad and marked accumulation of mononuclear cells in the dermis, leaving the epidermis intact, as in the delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction. As a notable finding, clone bb1-2 T cells injected into syngeneic mice elicited marked swelling of the footpad and lichen planus-like skin lesions, i.e., infiltration of lymphocytes in the epidermis and epidermal cell damage. The lymphocytes infiltrating in the epidermis were evaluated, as were the injected clone bb1-2 T cells expressing the Lyt-1.2 phenotype, by examination of the skin lesions elicited in C3H/He mice (H-2k, Lyt-1.1, 2.1) by the clone T cells. Clone bb1-2 T cells exerted in vitro cytotoxicity against H-2b and H-2k target cells, whereas clone kk-1 T cells did not show any cytotoxic activity, indicating a correlation between the cytotoxic activity of clone bb1-2 T cells and their ability to elicit lichen planus-like lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Multiple antigenic sites on the simian virus 40 (SV40) tumor-specific transplantation antigen (TSTA) were detected by the use of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones isolated from continuous cultures of SV40-specific CTL (H-2b). Two independently derived clones, K11 and K19, specific for the SV40 TSTA in association with H-2Db, each recognized a different antigenic determinant of the SV40 TSTA. This conclusion was based on the observation that a human papovavirus BK virus (BKV) transformed cell line, which possesses a T antigen serologically cross-reactive with that of SV40, was lysed by a heterogeneous population of SV40-immune lymphocytes and by clone K19 but not by K11. Therefore, these CTL clones must recognize two different antigenic determinants of the SV40 TSTA:K19 recognizes a cross-reactive determinant of the SV40 and BKV TSTA, whereas K11 is reactive against an SV40-specific determinant.  相似文献   

14.
Both protective immunity and immunopathology induced by mycobacteria are dependent on Ag-specific, CD4+ MHC class II-restricted T lymphocytes. The identification of Ag recognized by T cells is fundamental to the understanding of protective and pathologic immunity as well as to the design of effective immunoprophylaxis and immunotherapy strategies. Although some T cell clones are known to respond to recombinant mycobacterial heat shock proteins (hsp) like hsp3 65, the specificity of most T cells has remained unknown. We therefore have undertaken a specificity analysis of 48 well defined Mycobacterium leprae- and/or Mycobacterium tuberculosis-reactive (Th-1-like) T cell clones. Most clones (n = 44) were derived from different leprosy patients, and the remainder from one healthy control. Their HLA restriction molecules were DR2, DR3, DR4, DR5, DR7, DQ, or DP. T cell clones were stimulated with large numbers (n = 20 to 40) of mycobacterial SDS-PAGE-separated fractions bound to nitrocellulose. Each clone recognized a single fraction or peak with a particular Mr range. Some of the clones (n = 7) recognized the fraction that contained the hsp 65 as confirmed with the recombinant Ag. Most clones (n = 41), however, responded to Ag other than the hsp 65. Nine clones responded to a 67- to 80-kDa fraction. Five of them responded also to an ATP-purified, 70-kDa M. leprae protein, but only one of these five (that was HLA-DR2 restricted and cross-reactive with M. tuberculosis) recognized the recombinant C-terminal half (amino acids 278-621) of the M. leprae hsp 70 molecule and also recognized the recombinant M. tuberculosis hsp 70. We therefore have used the 5' part of the M. leprae hsp 70 gene that we have cloned recently. This fragment (that encodes amino acids 6-279) was indeed recognized by the other four M. leprae-specific T cells that were all HLA-DR3 restricted and did not cross-react with the highly homologous (95%) M. tuberculosis hsp 70. These results suggest that this novel fragment is a relevant T cell-stimulating Ag for leprosy patients. A panel of other recombinant Ag, including hsp 18 was tested. The majority of T cell clones appeared to recognize antigenic fractions distinct from hsp. In conclusion, T cells of leprosy patients see a large variety of different Ag including non-hsp, and one newly recognized moiety is the N-terminal M. leprae hsp 70 fragment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Helper T cell recognition of globular protein antigens requires the intracellular processing of the native molecule by an antigen-presenting cell and subsequent presentation of a peptide fragment, containing the antigenic determinant, on the cell surface where it is recognized by the specific T cell in conjunction with Ia. B lymphocytes can function as antigen-presenting cells and, when antigen is bound by their surface Ig, are greatly enhanced in this capacity. In this report it is demonstrated that pigeon cytochrome c covalently coupled to antibodies directed toward either B cell surface immunoglobulin, class I or class II are effectively processed and presented by B cells to cytochrome c-specific T cells, requiring up to 1000-fold less cytochrome c as compared with cytochrome c alone or cytochrome c coupled to nonspecific immunoglobulin. The potent activity of the cytochrome c-antibody conjugates appears to be due to the ability of B cells to concentrate the antigen when the process becomes receptor mediated rather than to a signal provided to the B cell by the conjugate binding, because cytochrome c was not more effectively presented in the presence of unconjugated antibodies as compared with cytochrome c alone. Furthermore, the binding of the native antigen to B cell surfaces is not alone sufficient for T cell activation, in that the cytochrome c-antibody conjugates require processing and are major histocompatibility complex restricted. The results presented here indicate that surface immunoglobulin is not unique in its ability to facilitate antigen processing and/or presentation and that Ig, class I and class II are capable of transporting the cytochrome c to a cytoplasmic vesicle where proteolysis occurs yielding the required peptide, minimally of 10 amino acids. Cytochrome c coupled to monovalent fragments of anti-Ig-antibodies was nearly as effectively presented as cytochrome c coupled to bivalent antibodies, indicating that phenomena mediated by bivalent binding, such as patching and capping of the surface Ig, were not required for effective antigen presentation. The cytochrome c-antibody conjugates, which allow antigen processing to be initiated by receptor-mediated endocytosis, may provide the necessary tools to unravel the intracellular processes by which protein antigens are processed and presented by B lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
The specificities of the xenoantisera made against mouse myeloma cells have been compared to those recognized by alloantiserum by studying patterns of cytotoxicity on both normal and malignant plasma cells. Goat antiserum obtained by immunization with Balb/c mouse myeloma ADJ-PC-22A cells and purified by in vivo absorption could detect cell surface antigenic determinants present on plasma cells and on cells of liver, kidney, and brain (PLKB antigen), as we had previously reported for a similarly prepared rabbit antiserum. In spite of an apparent similarity between the tissue representation of the PLKB determinant and that of PC.1 antigenic determinants which were detected by DBA/2 anti-ADJ-PC-22A cell alloantiserum, the PLKB antigenic determinant is not identical with the PC.1 antigenic determinant, since the former is found on the tissues of PC.1-negative as well as PC.1-positive strains of mice. However, it was deduced that the PLKB antigenic determinant and the PC.1 antigenic determinant reside in close proximity on the cell surface or maybe even on the same molecule, since Fab fragments of antiserum against either PLKB or PC.1 blocked the cytotoxicity against both antigens. On the other hand, these Fab fragments did not inhibit the cytotoxicity of anti-H-2 antiserum, indicating that neither PLKB nor PC.1 antigenic determinants are in close proximity to H-2 antigens. Association of PLKB and PC.1 determinants was further supported by the finding that the loss of the PLKB determinant in a variant of myeloma MOPC-70A corresponds to the loss of PC.1 determinant on the same cells.  相似文献   

17.
Human T-lymphocyte clones (TLCs) were generated against the hemagglutinin (HA) of A/Texas/1/77 influenza virus by limiting dilution. TLCs were then screened for antigen specificity on chemically synthesized peptides representing the HA1 molecule. It has been hypothesized that different T cells that recognize the identical antigenic determinant are controlled by (restricted by) the same class II epitope. Two TLCs, HA1.4 and HA1.7, both recognized the same HA peptide and in proliferation studies exhibited identical restriction patterns. Two other clones, HA 1.9 and HA 2.43, recognized different HA determinants and also had distinct restriction patterns. Proliferation inhibition studies with monoclonal antibodies against human class II molecules demonstrated three unique patterns of blocking with the clones, suggesting that clones may be restricted to a unique class II epitope depending on the HA determinant recognized. These data can be interpreted as supporting the argument that human immune responses to influenza hemagglutinin are under Ir gene control exerted at the level of the viral antigenic determinant recognized in association with particular D-region restricting elements. The determinant selection and clonal deletion theories are compared for their capacity to best explain these findings.Abbreviations used in this paper 3HTdR tritiated methyl thymidine - MHC major histocompatibility complex - HLA human MHC - PBLs peripheral blood lymphocytes - APCs antigen-presenting cells - TLCs T-lymphocyte clones - TCGF T-cell growth factor - MoAbs monoclonal antibodies  相似文献   

18.
T-cell epitopes on the E2 protein of rubella virus were studied by using 15 overlapping synthetic peptides covering the E2 protein sequence. The most frequently recognized epitopes on E2 were E2-4 (residues 54 to 74), with 5 of 10 tested T-cell lines responding to it. Two CD4+ cytotoxic T-cell cloned isolated from one T-cell line responded strongly in proliferation assays with peptide E2-4 and were cytotoxic to target cells presenting the E2-4 determinant. Truncated peptides contained within the E2-4 peptide sequence were used to define the T-cell determinants. Results indicated that amino acid residues 54 to 65 were directly involved. Human cell lines with different HLA phenotypes were tested for the capacity to present the antigenic determinants. The results suggested that recognition of peptide E2-4 by T-cell clones was associated with HLA DR7.  相似文献   

19.
Studies presented in this paper show that T cell clones recognizing different epitopes of multideterminant antigens can be restricted by the same I-A molecule. These data further support the concept that a single I-A restriction site can present more than one antigenic epitope. This concept was supported by data on the proliferation of T cell clones reactive with either poly(L-Glu60, L-Ala30, L-Tyr10)n(GAT) or poly(Tyr, Glu)-poly D,L-Ala--poly Lys [(T,G)-A--L] which recognized different epitopes on these multideterminant antigens. Two clones recognizing different epitopes on the same multideterminant antigen can be blocked by the same monoclonal anti-I-A antibody. Additionally, the mutation in the Abm12 chain utilized in [B6.C-H-2bm12(bm12) X B10.A(4R)]F1 mice can affect the restriction determinant of clones recognizing different antigenic epitopes. These results suggest that in the strictest sense, the determinant selection theory is not tenable and would support the concept that T cell specificity is controlled by the T cell repertoire.  相似文献   

20.
Several TNP-specific, H-2Kb-restricted mouse CTL clones were identified which specifically lysed target cells in the presence of tryptic digests of TNP-modified BSA. Glutaraldehyde fixation of cells revealed that the tryptic fragments did not require further cellular processing. Chromatographic fractionation of digested TNP-BSA identified the peptide TNP-BSA222-231, containing a TNP-modified lysine at BSA position 227, as the antigenic entity. The corresponding synthetic peptide was immunologically cross-reactive with the digest. All clones reactive with TNP-BSA222-231 cross-reacted with a similar peptide from mouse serum albumin (TNP-MSA126-135), favoring the assumption that TNP-BSA222-231 represents an artificial determinant, cross-reacting with some as yet unidentified, TNP-modified, Kb-associated self-peptides. Some of our clones also cross-reacted with tryptic digests of TNP-OVA or TNP-keyhole limpet hemocyanin. We interpret these findings to indicate that 1) a significant proportion of hapten (TNP) determinants for T cells are anchored to MHC via peptides; and 2) the amino acid sequence of these peptides may only partly define the specificity of the T cell-relevant hapten epitope, implying a particularly repetitive nature of these determinants. The production of T cell-antigenic hapten-peptide conjugates will hopefully open new roads to study immune responses to environmental allergens.  相似文献   

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