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1.
The role of interferon regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) in the innate immune response to infection has been well studied. However, less is known about IRF3 signaling in shaping the adaptive T cell response. To determine the role of IRF3 in the generation and maintenance of effective anti-viral T cell responses, mice deficient in IRF3 were infected with a potentially persistent virus, Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) or with a model acute infection, influenza A virus (IAV). IRF3 was required to prevent TMEV persistence and induce robust TMEV specific effector T cell responses at the site of infection. This defect was more pronounced in the memory phase with an apparent lack of TMEV-specific memory T cells expressing granzyme B (GrB) in IRF3 deficient mice. In contrast, IRF3 had no effect on antigen specific T cell responses at the effector stage during IAV infection. However, memory T cell responses to IAV were also impaired in IRF3 deficient mice. Furthermore, addition of cytokines during peptide restimulation could not restore GrB expression in IRF3 deficient memory T cells. Taken together, IRF3 plays an important role in the maintenance of effective anti-viral T cell memory responses.  相似文献   

2.
Antibody production to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) or hapten-conjugated SRBC (TNP-SRBC) was studied in mice with chronic Trypanosoma cruzi infections. Studies in vivo demonstrated that both IgM and IgG anti-SRBC responses were suppressed during chronic infection. Secondary IgG responses were suppressed regardless of whether the primary immunization was given before or after infection. The ability of cells from infected mice to provide help for antibody production was examined in vitro. Anti-SRBC responses were restored to cultures of whole spleen cells from infected mice by the addition of interleukin 2 (IL 2)-rich supernatants, indicating that these cells were capable of antibody production when sufficient help was provided. T cells from SRBC-primed infected mice were unable to provide significant help to normal B cell/M phi cultures for in vitro anti-TNP or anti-SRBC responses. The percentages of Thy-1+, Lyt-1+, and Lyt-2+ spleen cells were not significantly different between normal and infected mice. Anti-TNP and anti-SRBC responses were restored to cultures that contained T cells from infected mice and normal B cell/M phi by the addition of IL 2-rich spleen cell supernatants. The suppression of in vitro antibody responses in mice with chronic T. cruzi infections was associated with a lack of T cell help, which was provided by exogenous spleen cell supernatant.  相似文献   

3.
Mouse thymic virus is a herpesvirus that causes extensive thymic necrosis when given to newborn mice. During the time of acute infection spleen cells have markedly diminished reactivity to T cell phytomitogens and to allogeneic cells and are incapable of effecting a primary in vitro response to a "T-dependent" antigen; responses to B cell mitogens and to a T-independent antigen are unimpaired. Spleens from acutely infected mice have low theta antigen normal numbers of immunoglobulin-bearing cells. Surprisingly, despite widespread necrosis and cellular depletion, thymic cell reactivity to mitogens is unimpaired. However, the ability to thymocytes to proliferate and to generate cytotoxic killer cells in response to allogeneic cells is diminished.  相似文献   

4.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV)-induced demyelinating disease serves as a relevant animal model of human multiple sclerosis. Myelin damage induced by TMEV infection appears to be immune mediated. Disease susceptibility correlates best with the temporal development of chronic, high levels of TMEV-specific, MHC class II-restricted delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses. We have proposed a model wherein these responses result in CNS demyelination via a macrophage-mediated terminal nonspecific bystander response. As virus-specific DTH responses appear to be intimately involved in the pathogenicity of CNS demyelination, it is critical to determine the specificity of these responses so that effector T cells specific for potential pathogenic epitopes can be targeted to serve as the focus of specific immunoregulatory processes. In the current study, the capsid protein specificity of the TMEV-susceptible SJL/J and TMEV-resistant C57BL/6 mouse strains was examined. DTH and Tprlf responses in both infected and immunized SJL/J mice were found to be predominantly directed toward the VP2 capsid protein, specifically to an epitope(s) contained within the N-terminal 150 amino acids of VP2. This same epitope was also found to be dominant in priming SJL/J mice for responses to challenge with intact virions. In contrast, the T cell-mediated responses of TMEV-resistant C57BL/6 mice did not show preferential reactivity towards VP2, because all three major capsid proteins (VP1, VP2, and VP3) elicited responses with essentially equal potency. The relationship of the restricted VP2 T cell epitope to predicted neutralizing antibody sites on the VP2 protein is discussed as is the potential use of this epitope for prevention and/or treatment of TMEV-induced demyelinating disease via the induction of epitope-specific tolerance.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study, the effects of Trypanosoma cruzi and the T. cruzi-induced serum suppressor substance (SSS) on antibody responses were compared. Although infection with T. cruzi led to an alteration in T cell helper activity and a reduced specific B cell precursor frequency, SSS did not have a similar effect on either of these cell populations. The characteristics of the altered T cell helper activity was further investigated, and it was found that helper activity appeared earlier in infected mice than in normal or SSS-suppressed mice, and less antigen was required for optimal elicitation of T helper cells in infected mice. The potency of T cell helper activity also was shown to differ, and in the order T. cruzi-infected 6E normal 6E SSS-suppressed mice. It was found that spleen cells from T. cruzi-infected mice elaborated more potent specific helper factors than spleen cells from normal or SSS-suppressed mice, but did not produce a detectable nonspecific helper factor in vitro. Finally, the addition of B cells from low-dose primed, T. cruzi-infected mice to cultures of normal spleen cells resulted in subnormal responses to the priming antigen (sheep erythrocytes) but not to another unrelated antigen (trinitrophenyl-haptenated Brucella abortus), whereas similarly sensitized B cells from normal or SSS-suppressed mice caused no such effect.  相似文献   

6.
After intracerebral inoculation of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV), certain mouse strains develop a persistent central nervous system (CNS) infection and inflammatory demyelinating lesions containing infiltrates of mononuclear cells and macrophages. Previous findings demonstrating a strong correlation between disease incidence, the presence of particular H-2 region genotypes, and development of high levels of TMEV-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) supported an immune-mediated basis for myelin breakdown. These findings led us to examine whether a possible causal relationship would be supported by a temporal analysis comparing the onset of clinical disease and the development of TMEV-specific cellular or humoral immune responses in susceptible and resistant strains. In susceptible SJL/J mice, TMEV-specific DTH and T cell proliferative (Tprlf) responses developed within 10 to 14 days postinfection, preceded the onset of clinical signs, and remained elevated for 6 mo. In contrast, resistant BALB/c mice developed low levels of TMEV-specific Tprlf and no measurable DTH. However, both strains attained comparable levels of TMEV-specific serum antibody responses with parallel kinetics. Both DTH and Tprlf responses in susceptible SJL/J mice were shown to be specific for TMEV and mediated by L3T4+, Lyt-1+2-, class II-restricted T cells. A model is proposed implicating an effector role for TMEV-specific DTH, wherein lymphokine release by virus-specific DTH T cells leads to the recruitment, accumulation, and activation of macrophages in CNS tissue, which cause bystander myelin destruction and provide a permissive population of host cells for TMEV persistence.  相似文献   

7.
Suppressor cells in mice infected with Trypanosoma brucei.   总被引:31,自引:0,他引:31  
Within 2 to 3 days of infection with Trypanosoma brucei strain S42, the ability of spleen cells from infected CBA mice to mount a primary in vitro antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC) is profoundly reduced, and suppressor cells are generated as detected by cell mixture experiments. Suppressor cell activity lies in the T and adherent cell compartments of spleens from infected mice, but not in the B cell compartment, although antibody responses to a thymus-independent antigen, DNP-Ficoll, are significantly reduced. Suppression of antibody responses of normal spleen cells depends on viable cells from infected mice. The trypanosome, itself, plays no direct role in suppression, and we have ruled out the possibility of antigenic competition as a mechanism of suppression. Our data is consistent with the model of suppressor T cells induced by concanavalin A mitogenesis. We hypothesize that trypanosome antigens may directly stimulate T cells with the concomitant release of factors with affinity for macrophage surfaces thus becoming suppressive for T and B cell responses.  相似文献   

8.
Molecular mimicry is the process by which T cells activated in response to determinants on an infecting microorganism cross-react with self epitopes, leading to an autoimmune disease. Normally, infection of SJL/J mice with the BeAn strain of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) results in a persistent CNS infection, leading to a chronic progressive, CD4(+) T cell-mediated demyelinating disease. Myelin damage is initiated by T cell responses to virus persisting in CNS APCs, and progressive demyelinating disease (50 days postinfection) is perpetuated by myelin epitope-specific CD4(+) T cells activated by epitope spreading. We developed an infectious model of molecular mimicry by inserting a sequence encompassing the immunodominant myelin epitope, proteolipid protein (PLP) 139-151, into the coding region of a nonpathogenic TMEV variant. PLP139-TMEV-infected mice developed a rapid onset paralytic inflammatory, demyelinating disease paralleled by the activation of PLP139-151-specific CD4(+) Th1 responses within 10-14 days postinfection. The current studies demonstrate that the early onset demyelinating disease induced by PLP139-TMEV is the direct result of autoreactive PLP139-151-specific CD4(+) T cell responses. PLP139-151-specific CD4(+) T cells from PLP139-TMEV-infected mice transferred demyelinating disease to naive recipients and PLP139-151-specific tolerance before infection prevented clinical disease. Finally, infection with the mimic virus at sites peripheral to the CNS induced early demyelinating disease, suggesting that the PLP139-151-specific CD4(+) T cells could be activated in the periphery and traffic to the CNS. Collectively, infection with PLP139-151 mimic encoding TMEV serves as an excellent model for molecular mimicry by inducing pathologic myelin-specific CD4(+) T cells via a natural virus infection.  相似文献   

9.
Spleen cells from F1 mice undergoing chronic graft-vs-host (GVH) reaction, induced by injection of parental cells, were shown to be immunosuppressed since their in vitro responses to the mitogens concanavalin A (Con A) and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) were substantially lower than control animals. Serum, from mice undergoing GVH, when cultured in vitro with normal spleen cells was immunosuppressive. The proliferation response to Con A and allogeneic cells of normal syngeneic, allogeneic, and parental spleen cells was 90% suppressed when serum from mice undergoing chronic GVH was added in comparison to the addition of serum from untreated F1 mice. Similarly, the in vitro antibody response to a T-dependent antigen was impaired; however, the antibody response to a T-independent antigen was not impaired. These results indicate that T cell functions are more sensitive than are B cell functions to immunosuppressive factors in the serum of mice undergoing GVH.  相似文献   

10.
Invariant NKT cells are innate lymphocytes with a broad tissue distribution. Here we demonstrate that iNKT cells reside in the central nervous system (CNS) in the absence of inflammation. Their presence in the CNS dramatically augments following inoculation of C57Bl/6 mice with the neurotropic Theiler''s murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV). At the peak of inflammation the cellular infiltrate comprises 45 000 iNKT cells for 1 250 CD8 T cells specific for the immunodominant TMEV epitope. To study the interaction between these two T cell subsets, we infected both iNKT cell deficient Jα18-/- mice and iNKT cell enriched Vα14 transgenic mice with TMEV. The CD8 T cell response readily cleared TMEV infection in the iNKT cell deficient mice. However, in the iNKT cell enriched mice TMEV infection persisted and was associated with significant mortality. This was caused by the inhibition of the CD8 T cell response in the cervical lymph nodes and spleen after T cell priming. Taken together we demonstrate that iNKT cells reside in the CNS in the absence of inflammation and that their enrichment is associated with the inhibition of the anti-viral CD8 T cell response and an augmented mortality during acute encephalomyelitis.  相似文献   

11.
Genetically susceptible BALB/c mice are refractory to further infection after recovery from Leishmania major infection after a sublethal dose of gamma-irradiation. In contrast, mice immunized with killed promastigotes s.c. develop exacerbated lesions after infection. Both groups of mice produce only a low level of specific antibody and no detectable cytotoxic T cells, but do have a strong antigen-specific DTH, which is adoptively transferable with Lyt-1+2-, L3T4+ T cells. Kinetic and histological studies revealed that mice immunized s.c. developed Jones-Mote hypersensitivity, peaking at 15 hr. with little mononuclear cell infiltration at the site of antigen administration; whereas mice that had recovered from infection developed tuberculin-type of reactivity, peaking at 24 to 48 hr, with intense mononuclear cell infiltration. Splenic T cells from recovered mice, when injected into the footpads of normal recipients together with live promastigotes, were able to retard lesion development; whereas T cells from s.c. immunized mice, when similarly transferred, accelerated disease progression. Antigen-specific culture supernatant of spleen cells from recovered mice also activated normal resident peritoneal macrophages to kill intracellular L. major amastigotes and tumor cells. Culture supernatants of spleen cells from s.c. immunized or normal mice were devoid of such activities. Part of the macrophage-activating potential can be inhibited by antibody specific for IFN-gamma. These results therefore demonstrate that whereas the Jones-Mote reaction is correlated with disease exacerbation, the tuberculin-type of DTH may be protective. Furthermore, in vivo immunity is directly related to the capacity of T cells to produce macrophage-activating factor.  相似文献   

12.
The B cell is the initiating antigen-presenting cell in peripheral lymph nodes   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
We have examined the role of B cells in antigen presentation in lymph nodes in several ways. We found that mice depleted of B lymphocytes via chronic injection of anti-mu-chain antibody do not mount peripheral lymph node T cell proliferative responses to normally immunogenic doses of antigen. Depletion of B cells by passage of immune lymph node cells over anti-immunoglobulin columns early after immunization depletes antigen-presenting function from draining lymph nodes, and this function can be restored by using B cells or splenic adherent cells to allow the remaining T cells to proliferate. Lymph node B cells present antigen very effectively to lines of antigen-specific T cells. However, unfractionated lymph node cells from anti-mu-treated mice present very poorly, if at all, whereas unfractionated spleen cells from the same mice do present antigen. This is in keeping with our previous finding that helper T cell function in the spleen is normal in B cell-deprived mice. Finally, when mice homozygous for the lymphoproliferative gene lpr are treated chronically with anti-mu-chain antibody, lymphadenopathy is greatly retarded, suggesting a role for B cells in the massive proliferation of T cells in this syndrome. From this analysis, it would appear that the initiating antigen-presenting cell in the lymph node is a B lymphocyte, and that B lymphocytes in lymph nodes may be distinct from those in the spleen. It is of interest that these results also suggest that the lymph node lacks an antigen-presenting cell that is found in the spleen, perhaps the dendritic cell.  相似文献   

13.
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) play an important role in counter-regulating effector T cell responses in many infectious diseases. However, they can also contribute to the development of T cell dysfunction and pathogen persistence in chronic infections. Tregs have been reported to suppress virus-specific T cell responses in hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection of human patients as well as in HBV animal models. However, the phenotype and expansion of Tregs has so far only been investigated in other infections, but not in HBV. We therefore performed hydrodynamic injections of HBV plasmids into mice and analyzed the Treg response in the spleen and liver. Absolute Treg numbers significantly increased in the liver but not the spleen after HBV injection. The cells were natural Tregs that surprisingly did not show any activation or proliferation in response to the infection. However, they were able to suppress effector T cell responses, as selective depletion of Tregs significantly increased HBV-specific CD8+ T cell responses and accelerated viral antigen clearance. The data implies that natural Tregs infiltrate the liver in HBV infection without further activation or expansion but are still able to interfere with T cell mediated viral clearance.  相似文献   

14.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) produces a persistent central nervous system infection and chronic, inflammatory demyelinating disease in susceptible mice. TMEV antigen(s) and RNA genome have been detected in astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and macrophages during persistence. Whether there is a predominant cell type in which TMEV persists has not been resolved. Since TMEV-induced demyelinating lesions are infiltrated with macrophages and a number of other persistent viruses show near-exclusive tropism for these phagocytic cells, we used two-color immunofluorescent staining with conventional and confocal microscopy to colocalize TMEV to cells that stain with monoclonal antibodies (MOMA-2) [unknown antigen], Mac-1 [CD11b], FA-11 [CD66], and 2F8 [scavenger receptor]) to macrophages in BeAn-infected SJL mice. A predominant virus antigen burden within macrophages infiltrating demyelinating lesions was seen. A dichotomy of cells staining for virus antigen(s) was found with infected cells containing either a large or small virus antigen load. Ninety percent of cells with a large virus antigen load were large phagocytes (20 to 50 microns) that were readily detected at low power (5x objective). Cells with smaller amounts of virus antigen(s) turned out to be either these same large phagocytic cells or much smaller cells, approximately equal to 10 microns in diameter. Forty percent of cells with a small virus antigen load were macrophages. The unidentified approximately equal to 10-microns cells that are virus antigen positive and macrophage negative in this study could still be macrophages, or they may be oligodendrocytes. The fact that virus was detected in the cytoplasm and not phagolysosomes of macrophages and the sheer mass of fluorescently stained virus proteins in some macrophages suggest that TMEV persists in these phagocytic cells by active virus replication.  相似文献   

15.
We investigated the role of the immune system in protecting against virus-induced demyelination by generating lines of transgenic B10 (H-2(b)) congenic mice expressing three independent contiguous coding regions of the Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) under the control of a class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) promoter. TMEV infection of normally resistant B10 mice results in virus clearance and development of inflammatory demyelination in the spinal cord. Transgenic expression of the viral capsid genes resulted in inactivation of virus-specific CD8(+) T lymphocytes (class I MHC immune function) directed against the relevant peptides, but it did not affect production of virus capsid-specific antibodies or lymphocyte proliferation to the virus antigen (class II MHC immune functions). Following intracerebral infection with TMEV, all three lines of mice survived the acute encephalitis but transgenic mice expressing VP1 (or the cluster of virus capsid proteins [VP4, VP2, and VP3] mapping to the left of VP1 in the TMEV genome) developed virus persistence and subsequent demyelination in spinal cord white matter. Transgenic mice expressing noncapsid proteins mapping to the right of VP1 (2A, 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 3C, and 3D) cleared the virus and did not develop demyelination. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that virus capsid gene products of TMEV stimulate class I-restricted CD8(+) T-cell immune responses, which are important for virus clearance and for protection against myelin destruction. Presented within the context of self-antigens, inactivation of these cells by ubiquitous expression of relevant virus capsid peptides partially inhibited resistance to virus-induced demyelination.  相似文献   

16.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV)-induced demyelinating disease is a chronic-progressive, immune-mediated CNS demyelinating disease and a relevant model of multiple sclerosis. Myelin destruction is initiated by TMEV-specific CD4(+) T cells targeting persistently infected CNS-resident APCs leading to activation of myelin epitope-specific CD4(+) T cells via epitope spreading. We examined the temporal development of virus- and myelin-specific T cell responses and acquisition of virus and myelin epitopes by CNS-resident APCs during the chronic disease course. CD4(+) T cell responses to virus epitopes arise within 1 wk after infection and persist over a >300-day period. In contrast, myelin-specific T cell responses are first apparent approximately 50-60 days postinfection, appear in an ordered progression associated with their relative encephalitogenic dominance, and also persist. Consistent with disease initiation by virus-specific CD4(+) T cells, CNS mononuclear cells from TMEV-infected SJL mice endogenously process and present virus epitopes throughout the disease course, while myelin epitopes are presented only after initiation of myelin damage (>50-60 days postinfection). Activated F4/80(+) APCs expressing high levels of MHC class II and B7 costimulatory molecules and ingested myelin debris chronically accumulate in the CNS. These results suggest a process of autoimmune induction in which virus-specific T cell-mediated bystander myelin destruction leads to the recruitment and activation of infiltrating and CNS-resident APCs that process and present endogenous myelin epitopes to autoreactive T cells in a hierarchical order.  相似文献   

17.
Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV) infection of the brain induces a virus-specific CD8(+) T-cell response in genetically resistant mice. The peak of the immune response to the virus occurs 7 days after infection, with an immunodominant CD8(+) T-cell response against a VP2-derived capsid peptide in the context of the D(b) molecule. The process of activation of antigen-specific T cells that migrate to the brain in the TMEV model has not been defined. The site of antigenic challenge in the TMEV model is directly into the brain parenchyma, a site that is considered immune privileged. We investigated the hypothesis that antiviral CD8(+) T-cell responses are initiated in situ upon intracranial inoculation with TMEV. To determine whether a brain parenchymal antigen-presenting cell is responsible for the activation of virus-specific CD8(+) T cells, we evaluated the CD8(+) T-cell response to the VP2 peptide in bone marrow chimeras and mutant mice lacking peripheral lymphoid organs. The generation of the anti-TMEV CD8(+) T-cell response in the brain requires priming by a bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting cell and the presence of peripheral lymphoid organs. Although our results show that activation of TMEV-specific CD8(+) T cells occurs in the peripheral lymphoid compartment, they do not exclude the possibility that the immune response to TMEV is initiated by a brain-resident, bone marrow-derived, antigen-presenting cell.  相似文献   

18.
The role of antigen-specific helper T cells in augmenting the in vivo development of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses was investigated. C3H/HeN mice were inoculated i.p. with vaccinia virus to generate virus-reactive helper T cell activity. These vaccinia virus-primed or unprimed mice were subsequently immunized subcutaneously (s.c.) with either trinitrophenyl (TNP)-modified syngeneic spleen cells (TNP-self), vaccinia virus-infected spleen cells (virus-self), or cells modified with TNP subsequent to virus infection (virus-self-TNP). Seven days later, these mice were tested for anti-TNP DTH responses either by challenging them directly with TNP-self into footpads or by utilizing a local adoptive transfer system. The results demonstrated that vaccinia virus-primed mice failed to generate significant anti-TNP DTH responses when s.c. immunization was provided by either virus-self or TNP-self alone. In contrast, vaccinia virus-primed mice, but not unprimed mice, could generate augmented anti-TNP DTH responses when immunized with virus-self-TNP. Anti-vaccinia virus-reactive helper activity was successfully transferred into 600 R x-irradiated unprimed syngeneic mice by injecting i.v. spleen cells from virus-primed mice. These helper T cells were found to be antigen specific and were mediated by Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- cells. DTH effector cells enhanced by helper T cells were also antigen specific and were of the Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- phenotype. Furthermore, vaccinia virus-reactive helper T cell activity could be applied to augment the induction of tumor-specific DTH responses by immunization with vaccinia virus-infected syngeneic X5563 tumor cells. T-T cell interaction between Lyt-1+ helper T cells and Lyt-1+ DTH effector T cells is discussed in the light of the augmenting mechanism of in vivo anti-tumor-specific immune responses.  相似文献   

19.
Following intracerebral inoculation of Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis virus (TMEV), susceptible mouse strains develop a chronic demyelinating disease characterized by mononuclear cell-rich infiltrates in the central nervous system. Current evidence strongly supports an immune-mediated basis for myelin breakdown, with an effector role proposed for TMEV-specific, major histocompatibility class II-restricted delayed-type hypersensitivity, which temporally correlates with disease onset and remains chronically elevated in susceptible mice. This study examined the fine specificity of class II-restricted T cell responses in TMEV-infected mice to better define the relevant virus-encoded T cell determinant(s) responsible for triggering the demyelinating process, and to determine if class II-restricted neuroantigen-specific autoimmune responses could be detected in mice with TMEV-induced demyelination. The data clearly show that T cell responses in TMEV-infected mice are directed against determinants shared by closely related TMEV strains and are cross-reactive with related picornaviruses, such as encephalomyocarditis virus. In contrast, class II-restricted autoimmune responses against syngeneic mouse spinal cord homogenate and the two major protein components of myelin, myelin basic protein and proteolipid protein, are not demonstrable in susceptible SJL/J mice undergoing chronic TMEV-induced demyelinating disease, but are readily seen in SJL/J mice displaying chronic, relapsing experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. Cross-reactivity (or lack thereof), as determined by functional T cell analyses, was found to correlate with the extent of exact amino acid homology between the TMEV capsid proteins, the two neuroantigens, and related picornaviruses. The data thus do not support a major role for autoimmune responses against myelin proteins in TMEV-induced demyelinating disease, but are consistent with our previously proposed hypothesis that TMEV-specific T cell responses constitute a major effector mechanism of myelin breakdown.  相似文献   

20.
The present study defines assay systems for vaccinia virus-reactive Lyt-1+2- T cells mediating various functions and investigates the positivity of L3T4 antigen on these Lyt-1+2- T cells as well as the role of L3T4 antigen in the activation of these T cells with respect to their functions. C3H/He mice were immunized against vaccinia virus by inoculating viable virus intraperitoneally (i.p.). Anti-vaccinia virus reactivity in lymphoid cells from these immunized mice was assessed by proliferative response, helper T cell activities involved in cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) and B cell (antibody) responses, delayed type-hypersensitivity (DTH) response, and production of lymphokines such as interleukin 2 (IL2) and macrophage-activating factor (MAF). The results demonstrate that all of the above anti-vaccinia virus responses were mediated by Lyt-1+2- T cells and that these Lyt-1+2- T cells expressed L3T4 antigens on their cell surfaces. Moreover, such anti-vaccinia Lyt-1+2- T cell responses were inhibited in the presence of anti-L3T4 antigen antibody. These results indicate that there is a reciprocal relationship between Lyt-2 and L3T4 markers, and that L3T4 antigen is closely related to the activation of various functions of anti-vaccinia virus Lyt-1+2- T cells.  相似文献   

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