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1.
The induction of suppression by i.v. administered alloantigens in the murine host was analyzed as a model of the possible effects of blood transfusion on transplant survival. The results indicated that suppressor T cells (Ts) specific for minor histocompatibility alloantigens could be readily induced by the i.v. presentation of minor alloantigen-disparate spleen cells. In contrast, similar priming with cells differing solely at the H-2 major histocompatibility complex stimulated only positive T cell immunity, with no evidence of suppression. The induction of H-2 directed Ts activity could be accomplished only by i.v. priming with major plus minor incompatible donor cells, suggesting that suppressor cell recognition of minor alloantigens may have facilitated the generation of Ts against H-2-encoded major transplantation antigens. A role for minor histocompatibility antigens in the regulation of H-2-specific immunity at the effector level was also indicated. Ts induced by i.v. pretreatment with minor antigen-disparate donor cells not only suppressed the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to the relevant minor alloantigens, but also inhibited DTH against unrelated H-2 alloantigens introduced during subsequent intradermal immunization. Suppression of H-2-directed T cell reactivity was specific in that the presence of the Ts-inducing minor alloantigens was also required and occurred only when the minor and unrelated major alloantigens were presented within the same inoculum, if not on the same cell surface. The capacity of Lyt-2+Ts or Ts-derived suppressive factors specific for one set of cell surface molecules to modulate responses to an unrelated group of surface antigens does not appear to represent a general phenomenon, because similar suppression of immunity to unrelated tumor-specific transplantation antigens by minor-specific Ts was not observed. These results are discussed with respect to the possible mechanism of H-2-directed suppression and the role of the I region in Ts recognition of antigen.  相似文献   

2.
The contact-sensitizing haptens dinitrophenyl (DNP) and oxazalone (Ox) act as helper determinants for antibody responses to Thy-1 when conjugated to donor thymus cells. The helper effect is transferrable from primed to naive mice with spleen cells, producing specific augmentation of in vivo PFC responses to Thy-1. The helper cells are hapten-specific and require associative recognition of hapten and Thy-1, excluding a role for nonspecific B cell activation. The phenotype of the helper cells is Thy-1+ and Lyt-1+2-. Antigen-specific suppression could be readily generated by using an inoculum of DNP-modified syngeneic RBC. T cells from these suppressed donors (Ts) were shown to abolish the helper effects of TH in adoptive transfer experiments in vivo. These Ts were characterized as Thy-1+ and Lyt-1-2+. A requirement for MHC compatibility at the I-J subregion was necessary between the Ts and the recipient to obtain a transfer of suppression.  相似文献   

3.
The T suppressor (Ts) cell population that functions to regulate antigen-specific MHC-restricted T helper (Th)-B cell interactions also regulates the activation of B cells by cloned autoreactive Th cells. Activated Ts cells were generated by in vivo priming and restimulation in vitro with high concentrations of the specific priming antigen. Once generated, this Ts population inhibits the Th-dependent activation of primed B cells by both antigen-specific and autoreactive T cells in an antigen-nonspecific manner. This suppression requires the participation of both Lyt-1+2- and Lyt-1-2+ T cells. It was also demonstrated that accessory cells were required for the induction of Ts cells. Moreover, the generation of suppression was MHC-restricted and required the recognition by T cells of Ia antigens on accessory cells. These studies demonstrate that the same or a very similar Ts cell population can function to inhibit the activation of B cells by antigen-specific as well as autoreactive T cells.  相似文献   

4.
Earlier studies have demonstrated that T cells activated in mixed lymphocyte reactions can exert positive as well as negative allogeneic effects on B cells expressing the appropriate alloantigens on their surface. We investigated the effect of in vivo priming of T cells with alloantigens on their capacity to help or suppress allogeneic B cell cultures against sheep erythrocytes. We used immunization protocols that have been shown to be optimal for induction of alloantigen-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) and alloantigen-specific suppressor T (Ts) cells for DTH. The results show that in vivo stimulation with alloantigens, depending on the immunization route and the lymphoid organ studied, can be as effective as in vitro stimulation in increasing the frequency of alloantigen-specific helper T (Th) cells and Ts cells. Subcutaneous immunization induced a 10-fold frequency raise of Th cells as well as of Ts cells in the lymph nodes. In the spleen the Th cell population was hardly affected by s.c. immunization, whereas the Ts cell population increased by at least a factor 20. Intravenous immunization, on the other hand, selectively expanded the Th cell population in the spleen, whereas the splenic Ts cell population and the Th and Ts cells in the lymph nodes were not affected. Comparison of these results with our previous data concerning characteristics and the requirements of in vivo activation of alloantigen-specific DTH reactive T cells and of alloantigen-specific Ts cells suggest that different Ts cell populations are involved in suppression of alloantigen-specific DTH in vivo and of allogeneic suppression of in vitro induced sheep erythrocytes specific antibody formation.  相似文献   

5.
The present investigation was initiated to determine the mechanism by which 1,3-bis(2-chloro-ethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) treatment of tumor-bearing mice results in a high percentage of surviving mice which are resistant to subsequent homologous tumor challenge. Spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice bearing the syngeneic LSA ascites tumor failed to demonstrate significant tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity when stimulated in vitro with irradiated tumor cells. This lack of CTL activity correlated with the presence and high activity of two types of CTL-regulatory suppressor T cells (Ts), tumor-specific Thy-1+, Lyt-1-2+ and tumor-nonspecific Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2+ cells, as demonstrated by a double-positive selection technique. In contrast, spleen cells from BCNU-treated tumor-bearing mice generated high tumor-specific CTL activity when stimulated in vitro with irradiated tumor cells. This CTL activity correlated with the lack of demonstrable tumor-specific Ts and greatly diminished tumor-nonspecific Ts activity. The tumor-specific helper activity of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+,2- cells was found to be similar in both BCNU-treated and untreated tumor-bearing mice. BCNU-treated mice that survived a primary LSA tumor challenge (referred to as BCNU-cured mice) resisted subsequent challenge with the homologous (LSA) but not with a heterologous syngeneic tumor (EL-4). However, rejection of a secondary challenge with LSA tumor by BCNU-cured mice was inhibited by adoptive transfer of spleen cells from either normal mice or mice bearing LSA tumors. Furthermore, LSA tumor cells that failed to evoke tumor-specific CTL activity in normal mice could induce high CTL activity in BCNU-cured mice. The present study suggests that, in addition to its direct tumoricidal activity, BCNU inhibits the induction of tumor-specific Ts, thereby explaining why a high percentage of mice survive a primary syngeneic tumor challenge after treatment with BCNU, and also resist subsequent rechallenge with the homologous tumor.  相似文献   

6.
Results of the preceding report demonstrated that in vivo treatment with monoclonal anti-I-A antibodies provided an effective means of prolonging the survival of murine tail skin allografts. The mechanism of antibody action was shown to include the activation of alloantigen-specific suppressor T cells (Ts), although the relationship between Ts expression and graft survival was not determined. This issue was addressed in the current studies through a kinetic analysis of suppressor and effector T cell responses in control and treated allograft recipients. Donor-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses were detectable in untreated A/J recipients of B10.A allografts 8 days after transplantation, rising to near maximum levels by day 12. Rejection in these animals occurred by day 11. In contrast, the predominant cellular response of anti-I-A treated animals for 12 days after transplantation was that of transferable suppression, DTH and CTL reactivity not being evident until day 15, coincident with the decay of Ts activity. Rejection in these animals was observed approximately 19 days post-transplant. CTL responsiveness in the latter group could not be reconstituted by the addition of antigen-presenting cells to the secondary in vitro culture system, nor was the CTL deficit due to antibody carry-over. It is considered that the altered expression of effector cell responses to graft alloantigens is due at least in part to the in vivo inhibition of helper T cell activity by anti-I-A-induced Ts, and that rejection in the treated host results from an eventual decline in the functional expression of this regulatory T cell subset.  相似文献   

7.
The cytotoxic activity of alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) was maintained and augmented by transferring cells from a 5-day mixed lymphocyte culture MLC into a host culture (HC) containing indomethacin, freshly explanted normal spleen cells, and peritoneal cells which were syngeneic to the MLC cells. The MLC cells used in the transfer experiments were generated by culturing untreated H-2b splenic responders with irradiated H-2d stimulators, or were generated by culturing Lyt-2-depleted H-2b splenic responders with irradiated H-2d stimulators. The allo-CTL were found to be derived from the donor MLC (first culture) when unfractionated MLC cells were transferred into a host (second) culture and incubated for 5 days. In contrast, the allo-CTL were derived from host culture cells when Lyt-2-depleted MLC cells were transferred and the combined cultures incubated for 5 days. In the former case, the augmentation of MLC-derived cytotoxicity did not result from nonspecific expansion of all donor T cells; instead it was mediated by lymphokine(s), distinct from IL-2, produced by helper T cells generated in host culture, which appeared to selectively expand the antigen-specific CTL or to increase the cytotoxic activity of these CTL. The helper T cells were Thy-1+, L3T4+, and Lyt-2-. These findings indicate that antigen-nonspecific help was provided by helper cells or helper factors (lymphokines) generated in the host culture, which maintained and augmented the cytotoxic activity of the fully generated allo-CTL. This helper effect was also seen in the induction of primary allo-CTL responses which could be generated with fewer stimulating cells and with a stronger cytotoxic response at different R/S ratios tested. The generation of allo-CTL in second culture following transfer of Lyt-2-depleted MLC cells to host cultures appears to have involved antigen carryover from the MLC; however, antigen carryover alone was not sufficient. It appears that in the absence of Lyt-2+ suppressor T cells, antigen-specific help might be generated in donor cultures (Lyt-2-depleted MLC) which promoted or recruited the generation of antigen-specific CTL in host culture.  相似文献   

8.
The inoculation of B6D2F1 mice with T lymphocytes from the C57BL/6 parental strain induces an "immunosuppressive" graft-vs-host reaction (B6 GVH), whereas inoculation of T cells from the other, DBA/2 parental strain induces an "immunostimulatory" GVH reaction and a lupus-like disease (DBA GVH). The present study compares cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) function in the spleens of these GVH mice as well as differences in the donor inoculum that could account for these different types of GVH. We observed that the B6 GVH induces an immunodeficiency that encompasses CTL precursors (and possibly T helper cells) and results in suppressor cells that abrogate responses to both trinitrophenyl (TNP)-modified self and third party alloantigens. In contrast, the DBA GVH induces only a T helper cell immunodeficiency and results in suppressor cells selective for class II restricted L3T4+ T helper cells. Chimeric T cells were detected in both types of GVH. In the B6 GVH both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ donor cells were observed, although Lyt-2+ cells predominated. In the DBA GVH, donor T cells were almost exclusively of the L3T4+ phenotype. The lack of appreciable donor Lyt-2+ cells in the DBA GVH can be explained by a defect in the DBA donor inoculum manifested by a naturally occurring two-fold reduction in Lyt-2+ cell numbers as well as a nine-fold reduction in CTL precursors with anti-F1 specificity. T cells in the DBA inoculum, therefore, are predominantly L3T4+. A similar defect induced in B6 donor cells by anti-Lyt2 antibody and complement not only converted the suppressive GVH to a stimulatory GVH, as measured by anti-DNA antibodies, but also resulted in a T cell immune deficiency characteristic of the DBA GVH, i.e., a selective loss of the TNP-self CTL response. Thus the presence or absence of adequate numbers of functioning Lyt-2+ cells in the donor inoculum is correlated with the development of either a suppressive or stimulatory GVH, respectively. That donor Lyt-2+ cells mediate a suppressive GVH through cytolytic mechanisms is evidenced by greater than 70% reduction in B6 GVH spleen cell numbers and readily demonstrable anti-F1 CTL activity by these spleen cells despite an inability to generate anti-allogeneic or anti-TNP self CTL activity even in the presence of added T helper factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Down-regulation of the development of CTL has been studied in mice both in vivo and in vitro. To generate CTL to hapten-altered self Ag in vivo, an immunization protocol has been used in which the host's Th cells are stimulated by a minor locus histocompatibility Ag (Mlsd) and its precursor CTL are activated by trinitrophenylated syngeneic spleen cells. Injecting the H-2 compatible Mls-disparate spleen cells along with the TNP-coupled self cells into the hind paws causes TNP-self specific CTL to appear in popliteal lymph nodes within 5 days. We have previously reported that inducing Ts cells by i.v. injecting Mlsd-bearing cells prevents in vivo generation of TNP-self specific CTL after immunization in this way. Here the induced Ts cell as well as the mechanism by which it functions have been further examined. The suppression was seen to extend to allogeneic as well as TNP-self Ag, provided the Mlsd-tolerized animal was reexposed to Mlsd-bearing cells at the time of immunization for CTL. By transferring the Mlsd-induced suppression adoptively we have learned that the splenic suppressor cell bears Thy-1.2 as well as Lyt-1.1 Ag and inhibits the generation of CTL at the afferent limb. In addition, Mlsd-induced PEC of Mlsd-tolerized mice, but not of normal mice, mediated suppression of development of CTL in vivo. The active cells within the tolerized PEC have been identified as T cells and macrophages (M phi). Furthermore, PEC from mice tolerized to Mlsd suppressed generation of CTL directed toward TNP-self targets in vitro. T cells and M phi separated from PEC of Mlsd-tolerized mice achieved suppression best in culture when present together. In addition, Lyt-1+ splenic cells from tolerized but not normal mice cooperated to down-regulate CTL generation in vitro with peritoneal M phi from either tolerized or normal mice. Supernatants of 24- to 72-h cultures of PEC from tolerized mice were suppressive of CTL generation when incorporated at 40 to 50% of culture volume. Supernatants of T cells from tolerized PEC or spleen were suppressive in culture only when M phi from normal mice were also present. To achieve suppression dialyzed supernatants of M phi from tolerized mice could replace the M phi.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Resistant CBA mice infected with Leishmania tropica promastigotes develop concomitant and convalescent immunity against reinfection. This can be adoptively transferred by splenic and lymph node T cells with a threshold dosage of 1 to 2.5 x 10(7). The effector cells are of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- phenotype. The same immune cell population also adoptively transfers specific DTH to L. tropica, which is restricted by the major histocompatibility complex. On the other hand, highly susceptible BALB/c mice infected with L. tropica develop antigen-specific suppressor T (Ts) cells (previously shown to inhibit the induction and expression of DTH), which are capable, on transference, of reversing the healing of lesions induced by prior sublethal irradiation of BALB/c mice. As few as 10(6) of these T cells are effective in abrogating the potent prophylactic effect of 550 rad. The Ts cells are of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2-, and I-J- phenotype. Sublethally irradiated and infected BALB/c mice produce antibody responses quantitatively and isotypically similar during the critical first 40 days after infection whether or not they are injected with 10(7) Ts cells (nonhealing vs healing). Thus, impairment of DTH and curative immune responses in BALB/c mice cannot be attributed to a helper function of these Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- cells for the formation of suppressive antibody.  相似文献   

11.
Inoculation of 10(8) unirradiated, minor H antigen-incompatible spleen cells into recipients leads to a failure of the induction of cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) specific for these antigens. In contrast, a strong CTL response against minor H antigens is obtained when the inoculated cells are irradiated or treated with Thy-1-, Lyt-1- or Lyt-2-specific antibody and complement. Thus the failure of CTL induction is probably due to suppression mediated by radiosensitive, Lyt-1+2+ T cells in the immunizing inoculum. We demonstrate here that the inoculated cells must share class I MHC loci with the recipients for the suppression to occur. Thus, the interaction between the suppressor T (Ts) cells and their targets (presumably the CTL precursors) is restricted by class I molecules. A disparity at class II loci between the inoculated cells and the recipients overrides the class I-restricted suppression, possibly through a positive allogeneic effect. The simplest interpretation of the class I restriction of Ts cell-target cell interaction is that the CTL precursors recognize minor H antigens in the context of class I molecules on the surface of the Ts cells themselves.  相似文献   

12.
Lyt-2 molecules play a role in antigen recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). In an attempt to determine whether Lyt-2 molecules play a similar role in suppressor T cell (Ts) functions, the effect of anti-Lyt-2 antibodies on Ts generation and effector activity was studied. Allospecific Ts were induced in allogeneic mixed lymphocyte cultures (MLC). Anti-Lyt-2 antibodies added to MLC in the absence of complement abolished CTL generation, but had no effect on concomitant induction of Ts. In a different experimental system, allospecific Ts were induced in cultures treated with pyrilamine, which blocks generation of CTL but allows differentiation of Ts. The addition of anti-Lyt-2 antibodies to pyrilamine-treated MLC resulted in unaffected induction of Ts. It was further demonstrated that the effector activity of Ts was as resistant to anti-Lyt-2 antibodies as their induction, in contrast to the cytolytic activity of CTL, which was inhibited by the same antibodies. Ts in the present experimental system were Lyt-2+ antigen-specific cells. It therefore appears that Lyt-2 molecules, although expressed on both CTL and Ts, are involved in CTL activity, but do not play an essential role in Ts function.  相似文献   

13.
By using rabbit antiserum to a glycolipid, ganglio-n-tetraosylceramide (ASGM1), the accessory effect of natural killer (NK) cells on the generation of alloimmune CTL in mice was investigated. When normal C3H/He mice were immunized with C57BL/6 or BALB/c spleen cells, they generated alloimmune CTL with a surface marker phenotype of Thy-1+ Lyt-1-2+ ASGM1-, preceded by early augmentation of cytotoxic activity of NK cells with a Thy-1-Lyt-1-2-ASGM1+ phenotype. Administration of anti-ASGM1 (10 microliters) in mice resulted in a complete depletion of NK activity and ASGM1+ cells in the spleen even 1 day after injection, but no changes in the proportions of T (Thy-1+) cells and their Lyt-1 and Lyt-2 subsets as revealed by an immunofluorescence analyzer (FACS) and phagocytic cells. When these anti-ASGM1-treated mice were immunized with allogeneic cells, they showed neither augmented NK activity nor generation of alloimmune CTL, and spleen cells isolated from these anti-ASGM1-treated mice produced no CTL response to alloimmunization in vitro. Normal spleen cells treated with the antiserum and complement in vitro also showed a complete NK depletion without any deterioration of T cells and their Lyt-1 and Lyt-2 subsets, and when stimulated with allogeneic cells they generated no CTL. Spleen NK (ASGM1+) cells were purified by Percoll-gradient centrifugations followed by complement-dependent killing of T cells with the use of anti-Thy-1 monoclonal antibody, and were further purified by panning methods with anti-ASGM1, giving a preparation consisting of greater than 90% ASGM1+, Ly-5+ cells, and less than 0.5% of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+, and Lyt-2+ cells. These purified ASGM1+ Thy-1- cells alone generated no alloimmune CTL in response to alloantigens, suggesting that ASGM1+ NK cells contained no precursors of alloimmune CTL. When added into NK-depleted spleen cells, they restored the normal alloimmune CTL response of the spleen cells, indicating that ASGM1+ fractions contained cells to provide an accessory function for CTL generation. Lyt-1+ cells purified by panning methods did not restore the CTL response of NK-depleted spleen cells. These results indicate that ASGM1+ NK cells, but not Lyt-1+ helper T cells contaminating ASGM1+ fractions at undetectable levels, are responsible for the accessory function. When these purified ASGM1+ Thy-1- cells were stimulated with allogeneic cells, they produced IL 2 and IFN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Suppressor T (Ts) cells that can suppress delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) against histocompatibility (H) antigens can be isolated from spleen and lymph nodes a few days after i.v. immunization of mice with irradiated allogeneic spleen cells. In this paper we investigated the suppression of the efferent phase of DTH to characterize the Ts cells involved, and to compare them with the afferent phase Ts cells that have been characterized in a previous paper of this series. The DTH against third party alloantigens that were not used for the i.v. suppressive immunization could be suppressed by presenting the third party alloantigens together with the original alloantigens in the challenge inoculum for eliciting the DTH reaction. Thus the ultimate suppressive effect by the Ts cells that are active during the efferent phase of DTH is nonspecific. This non-specific suppression of DTH to alloantigens has previously been found for the afferent phase Ts cells as well. For suppression of the efferent phase of DTH to alloantigens, a population of Lyt-1+2+ Ts cells appeared to be essential, just like in the suppression of the afferent phase of DTH to alloantigens. We did not find evidence for the involvement of cyclophosphamide-sensitive auxiliary Ts cells in suppression of the efferent phase of DTH. Also no evidence was found for H-2 or Igh-restricted activation and function of the Ts cells that were active during afferent and efferent phases of the DTH response to H antigens. In view of these similarities between afferent phase and efferent phase Ts cells we conclude that there are no arguments as yet to suppose that there is more than one type of T cells involved in the suppression of the afferent and efferent limb of DTH against H antigens.  相似文献   

15.
The present studies were carried out to characterize the cellular events involved in the induction and function of carrier-specific Ts cells, which selectively regulate the generation of IgG responses by Lyb-5- B cells. It was demonstrated that this regulation is in fact mediated by two distinct suppressor pathways. In one pathway, carrier-primed Lyt-1 + 2 - Ts cells are specifically activated by in vitro reexposure to the priming antigen. After this specific activation, these Lyt-1 + 2 - Ts cells are able to suppress IgG responses in an antigen-nonspecific manner. This suppression requires the participation of unprimed Lyt-1 - 2 + T cells, and is effective in both the early and the late phases of antibody responses. A second suppressor pathway requires the antigen-specific activation of primed Lyt-1 - 2 + Ts cells. Suppression of antibody responses by activated Lyt-1 - 2 + Ts cells is highly carrier specific, in contrast to the nonspecific effector function of Lyt-1 + 2 - Ts cells, appears to act without requirement for additional T cell populations; and is effective only early in the course of the antibody response. Thus, it appears that two Ts cell populations may function through distinct mechanisms to regulate the generation of IgG Lyb-5- B cell responses.  相似文献   

16.
Cytotoxic lymphocyte (CTL) responses are not usually generated during primary mixed leukocyte culture (MLC) with H-2 identical cells. Thus NZB mice are unusual in that their spleen cells do mount CTL responses during primary MLC with H-2d identical stimulator cells; the predominant target antigen for these NZB responses is Qa-1b. Considering the numerous immunoregulatory defects in NZB mice, we postulated that these NZB anti-Qa-1 primary CTL responses were due to an abnormality in T suppressor cell activity. Cellular interactions capable of suppressing NZB anti-Qa-1 primary CTL responses were investigated by using one-way and two-way MLC with spleen cells from NZB mice and other H-2d strains. Although H-2d identical one-way MLC with the use of NZB responders resulted in substantial CTL responses, only minimal CTL responses were detected from two-way MLC with the use of NZB spleen cells plus nonirradiated spleen cells from other H-2d mice. Thus the presence of non-NZB spleen cells in the two-way H-2d identical MLC prevented the generation of NZB CTL. Noncytotoxic mechanisms were implicated in the suppression of the NZB CTL responses during two-way MLC, because only minimal CTL activity was generated when NZB spleen cells were cultured with semiallogeneic, H-2d identical (e.g., NZB X BALB) F1 spleen cells. The observed suppression could be abrogated with as little as 100 rad gamma-irradiation to the non-NZB spleen cells. The phenotype of these highly radiosensitive spleen cells was Thy-1+, Lyt-1+, Lyt-2-, L3T4+. The functional presence of these cells in the spleens of semiallogeneic, H-2d identical F1 mice indicated that their deficiency in NZB mice was a recessive trait. These data suggest that NZB mice lack an L3T4+ cell present in the spleens of normal mice that is capable of suppressing primary anti-Qa-1 CTL responses. This model system should facilitate additional investigations of the cellular interactions and immunoregulatory mechanisms responsible for controlling primary CTL responses against non-H-2K/D class I alloantigens. The model may also provide insight into the immunoregulatory defects of autoimmune NZB mice.  相似文献   

17.
The immune response to chicken egg-white lysozyme (HEL) is actively and specifically regulated by antigen-specific T cell-mediated suppression in mice bearing the H-2b haplotype; the suppression is therefore MHC-linked. In this report, we propose a possible mechanism for MHC-linked suppression of HEL-helper T cells based on expression of I region-encoded cell surface determinants. We determined whether inhibition of anti-HEL antibody responses correlated with expression of serologically detectable I-A-encoded cell surface determinants by antigen-specific helper, suppressor-inducer, or suppressor-effector T cells. It was observed that HEL-suppressor-effector T cells, but not helper or suppressor-inducer T cells, were eliminated after treatment with anti-I-Ab antibody and complement. Furthermore, suppressor-effector T cells co-express Thy-1, Lyt-2, and I-A cell surface antigens. These results raise the possibility that HEL-specific helper T cells become functionally inhibited after recognition of HEL and I-A alloantigen displayed by suppressor-effector T cells. Thus, the interaction between helper and suppressor T cells may be analogous to the mechanism of T cell-B cell interaction.  相似文献   

18.
One of the problems raised by the T cell-induced allotypic suppression is the origin (donor or host) of the T cells responsible for the chronicity of the suppression. To address this point, we used T cells from Igha/a Thy-1.2 mice whose natural T cell activity against IgG2ab was enhanced in vivo. These T cells were injected into newborn Ighb/b Thy-1.1 mice where they induced complete suppression of IgG2ab expression in around 70% of these recipients. During a study that lasted more than 1 yr, we found that about 3% of the recipient splenocytes were T cells of the donor type. By means of suppression-transfer experiments, using either Thy-1.2+ or Thy-1.1+ cell-depleted splenocytes from mice suppressed in this manner we were able to unambiguously show that Thy-1.2+ cell-depleted splenocytes were incapable of transferring the suppression, whereas Thy-1.1+ cell-depleted splenocytes could. We thus demonstrated that suppression was maintained throughout the recipient's life by donor Thy-1.2+ T cells.  相似文献   

19.
We have studied the effect of methotrexate in murine acute graft vs host (GvH) disease at concentrations analogous to those used in human rheumatoid arthritis. The GvH reaction was induced by i.v. injection of parental spleen cells into a normal F1 recipient. The acute suppression of T cell function in GvH mice was prevented by methotrexate given orally for 10 days at 1.0 or 0.5 mg/kg but not at 0.25 mg/kg. T cell mitogen response and IL-2 secretion that were inhibited in GvH mice were restored by methotrexate. Protection from immunosuppression in drug-treated GvH mice lasted at least 3 wk after drug dosing was stopped. The mechanism of the protective effect appears to be a preferential inhibition of donor and host Lyt-2+ Ts cell proliferation. In mixing experiments we found that methotrexate inhibited Ts function in GvH mice. By dual fluorescence labeling we showed that the engraftment of donor Lyt-2+ cells was prevented by drug treatment. This was not true of donor L3T4+ cells which were clearly present in the spleens of GvH mice after methotrexate treatment. These donor L3T4 cells were functional in that they induced the production of anti-DNA autoantibodies in the methotrexate-treated GvH mice.  相似文献   

20.
In vivo and in vitro, murine peripheral T cells can suppress or "veto" the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes directed against antigens presented by those T cells. This suppression is antigen-specific and H-2-restricted. The recognition event initiating this suppression appears to be unidirectional; precursors of cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize the antigen-bearing veto cell and are thereby inactivated--the veto cell need not recognize the CTL precursor. We show here that 3/3 cytolytic T cell clones can exert veto activity in vitro on normal spleen cells which do not bear antigens the T cell clones can recognize. This suppression results in greatly diminished cytotoxic activity generated during a primary 5-day mixed lymphocyte culture against antigens which the veto cell expresses, but not against third-party antigens present in the same culture. In this same system, a noncytolytic T cell clone will not serve as a source of veto cells. Secondary cytotoxic responses are relatively resistant to the veto cell activity of cloned cytolytic T cells. The cloned veto cells do not suppress the generation of cytotoxic activity directed against antigens they recognize (and presumably carry over via antigen-specific receptors). Cold target competition during the cytotoxic assay has been eliminated as a possible mechanism for T cell clone-induced suppression, and suppression cannot be reversed by the addition to the mixed lymphocyte cultures of supernatants from concanavalin A-activated spleen cells. It is suggested that this mechanism of inactivating primary cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses could play an important role in the maintenance of self-tolerance and in the induction and maintenance of tolerance to allografts.  相似文献   

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