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1.
Immunization of mice with nonviable Listeria monocytogenes generates an insufficient CD8(+) T cell response and consequently only limited protection against subsequent L. monocytogenes infection. We have recently demonstrated that depletion of regulatory CD4(+) T cells during immunization significantly enhances CD8(+) T cell responses. In the present study, we determined the impact of CD4(+) T cell depletion on the CD8(+) T cell response against heat-killed LISTERIA: Treatment of mice with anti-CD4 mAb during boost immunization with heat-killed Listeria significantly increased numbers of Listeria-specific CD8(+) T cells and improved protection against subsequent infection with L. monocytogenes. During challenge infection, numbers of Listeria-specific CD8(+) T cells were enhanced, and these cells expressed effector functions in terms of IFN-gamma production. In summary, we demonstrate that combining nonviable L. monocytogenes vaccination and CD4(+) T cell depletion improves generation of long-lasting and functional Listeria-specific CD8(+) memory T cells.  相似文献   

2.
Effective protection against Listeria monocytogenes requires Ag-specific CD8(+) T cells. A substantial proportion of CD8(+) T cells activated during L. monocytogenes infection of C57BL/6 mice are restricted by the MHC class Ib molecule H2-M3. In this study, an H2-M3-restricted CD8(+) T cell clone specific for a known H2-M3 epitope (fMIGWII) was generated from L. monocytogenes-infected mice. The clone was cytotoxic, produced IFN-gamma, and could mediate strong protection against L. monocytogenes when transferred to infected mice. Macrophages pulsed with heat-killed LISTERIAE: presented Ag to the clone in a TAP-independent manner. Both TAP-independent and -dependent processing occurred in vivo, as TAP-deficient mice infected with L. monocytogenes were partially protected by adoptive transfer of the clone. This is the first example of CD8(+) T cell-mediated, TAP-independent protection against a pathogen in vivo, confirming the importance of alternative MHC class I processing pathways in the antibacterial immunity.  相似文献   

3.
CSF have been postulated to be important mediators of host defenses. The current studies were undertaken to investigate the production of CSF by Listeria-specific, T cell clones and to assess the participation of CSF in anti-listerial host resistance. Listeria-specific L3T4+, Lyt-2- T cell clones were isolated and expanded by standard techniques. The clones themselves protected mice from listerial challenge when injected intravenously, and supernatants generated from Ag-stimulated clones were protective. In order to define factors important in the protection, supernatants from the clones were assayed for CSF by several in vitro assays. Total colony-stimulating activity was measured with a bone marrow colony-forming assay. T cell clones secreted 1000 to 2000 U/ml of colony-stimulating activity after 48 hours of stimulation with specific antigen. The relative amounts of the various CSF were determined by the capacity of supernatants to support proliferation of the factor-dependent cell lines FDCP-1 and 32D cl 3 in the presence and absence of specific anti-CSF antibodies. Results showed that most of the CSF activity was due to granulocyte-macrophage (GM)-CSF and IL-3. The role of GM-CSF in anti-listerial host resistance was assessed in two types of experiments. In one set of experiments GM-CSF activity was neutralized in the supernatants by addition of specific rabbit anti-GM-CSF antibodies. Treated and untreated supernatants were then tested for their capacity to protect nonimmune mice against listerial challenge. Neutralization of GM-CSF in the supernatants decreased the protective capacity of the supernatants by approximately 23%. In a second set of studies, the administration of recombinant murine GM-CSF was shown to protect mice from challenges of L. monocytogenes. Taken together, these experiments provide evidence that CSF are important mediators of immune T cell mediated host defenses.  相似文献   

4.
Mice were infected with Listeria monocytogenes and Lyt-2+ T cell clones capable of lysing Ag-primed bone marrow macrophages were established. In accordance with earlier findings obtained at the population level, some T cell clones were identified which lysed bone marrow macrophages of different MHC type provided the relevant Ag was present. This unusual target cell recognition was further analyzed using a T3+, L3T4-, Lyt-2+, F23+, KJ16+ T cell clone, designated L-28. Target cell lysis by this clone was Ag specific, apparently non-MHC restricted. In contrast, YAC cells and P815 cells were not lysed by clone L-28. However, lysis of irrelevant targets could be induced by anti-T3, F23, or KJ16 mAb. Furthermore, Ag-specific lysis was blocked by anti-Lyt-2 mAb and by F(ab)2 fragments of F23 mAb. In addition to its cytolytic activity, clone L-28 produced IFN-gamma after co-stimulation with accessory cells, Ag, and rIL-2 and conferred significant protection on recipient mice when given together with rIL-2. These data suggest that non-MHC-restricted Lyt-2+ killer cells generated during listeriosis are cytolytic T lymphocytes that interact with their target Ag via the T cell receptor/T3 complex and the Lyt-2 molecule and, furthermore, that these cells play a role in anti-listerial resistance. The possible relevance of IFN-gamma secretion and target cell lysis for antibacterial protection is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The ability of several listeriolysin O-negative mutants of the EGD and NCTC 7973 strains of Listeria monocytogenes to activate specific T cell responses in vitro and in vivo was determined. T cell lines from different inbred mouse strains and derived T cell clones elicited by L. monocytogenes, strain EGD, which are able to adoptively transfer protection and granuloma formation were examined. Specificity testing revealed no differences between listeriolysin-positive and -negative strains to induce proliferation of the T cell lines and clones. Similar results were obtained when we examined CD4+ T cell-mediated granuloma formation in the livers of mice previously immunized with viable bacteria of the virulent strain. Granulomatous inflammation could be elicited by iv application of heat-killed bacteria of listeriolysin-positive and of -negative bacteria. Protective immunity to listerial infections and granulomatous inflammation therefore appears to be mediated by T cells recognizing epitopes on listerial antigens that are shared by both pathogenic and nonpathogenic Listeria strains.  相似文献   

6.
The inducible costimulator protein (ICOS) was recently identified as a costimulatory molecule for T cells. Here we analyze the role of ICOS for the acquired immune response of mice against the intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes. During oral L. monocytogenes infection, low levels of ICOS expression were detected by extracellular and intracellular Ab staining of Listeria-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. Blocking of ICOS signaling with a soluble ICOS-Ig fusion protein markedly impaired the Listeria-specific T cell responses. Compared with control mice, the ICOS-Ig treated mice generated significantly reduced numbers of Listeria-specific CD8(+) T cells in spleen and liver, as determined by tetramer and intracellular cytokine staining. In contrast, the specific CD8(+) T cell response in the intestinal mucosa did not appear to be impaired by the ICOS-Ig treatment. Analysis of the CD4(+) T cell response revealed that ICOS-Ig treatment also affected the specific CD4(+) T cell response. When restimulated with listerial Ag in vitro, reduced numbers of CD4(+) T cells from infected and ICOS-Ig-treated mice responded with IFN-gamma production. The impaired acquired immune response in ICOS-Ig treated mice was accompanied by their increased susceptibility to L. monocytogenes infection. ICOS-Ig treatment drastically enhanced bacterial titers, and a large fraction of mice succumbed to the otherwise sublethal dose of infection. Thus, ICOS costimulation is crucial for protective immunity against the intracellular bacterium L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

7.
IFN-gamma is critical for innate immunity against Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), and it has long been thought that NK cells are the major source of IFN-gamma during the first few days of infection. However, it was recently shown that a significant number of CD44highCD8+ T cells also secrete IFN-gamma in an Ag-independent fashion within 16 h of infection with L. monocytogenes. In this report, we showed that infection with other intracellular pathogens did not trigger this early IFN-gamma response and that cytosolic localization of Listeria was required to induce rapid IFN-gamma production by CD44highCD8+ T cells. Infection of C57BL/6 mice with an Escherichia coli strain expressing listeriolysin O (LLO), a pore-forming toxin from L. monocytogenes, also resulted in rapid IFN-gamma expression by CD8+ T cells. These results suggest that LLO expression is essential for induction of the early IFN-gamma response, although it is not yet clear whether LLO plays a direct role in triggering a signal cascade that leads to cytokine production or whether it is required simply to release other bacterial product(s) into the host cell cytosol. Interestingly, mouse strains that displayed a rapid CD8+ T cell IFN-gamma response (C57BL/6, 129, and NZB) all had lower bacterial burdens in the liver 3 days postinfection compared with mouse strains that did not have an early CD8+ T cell IFN-gamma response (BALB/c, A/J, and SJL). These data suggest that participation of memory CD8+ T cells in the early immune response against L. monocytogenes correlates with innate host resistance to infection.  相似文献   

8.
We analyzed the T cell-independent production of IFN-gamma in the severe combined immunodeficiency (scid) mutant mouse. Spleen cells from scid mice secreted high levels of IFN-gamma in response to heat-killed Listeria monocytogenes (HKLM), but not to the T cell stimulus ConA. This response was ablated by prior removal of adherent macrophages. IFN-gamma secretion in vitro was preceded by the rapid production of TNF and was inhibited by addition of neutralizing mAb to TNF. Moreover, injection of scid mice with anti-TNF mAb increased the severity of infection with live Listeria and inhibited macrophage activation for class II-MHC expression. Finally, IFN-gamma secretion and class II-MHC expression were also inhibited by an antibody to asialoGM1, a reagent known to impair host NK cell function. These results suggest that TNF is a critical cytokine in the T cell-independent pathway of macrophage activation in scid mice.  相似文献   

9.
CD8(+) T cells are required for protective immunity against intracellular pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes. In this study, we used class Ia MHC-deficient mice, which have a severe reduction in circulating CD8(+) T cells, to determine the protective capacity of class Ib MHC-restricted T cells during L. monocytogenes infection. The K(b-/-)D(b-/-) mutation was backcrossed onto a C.B10 (BALB/c congenic at H-2 locus with C57BL/10) background, because BALB/c mice are more susceptible to Listeria infection than other commonly studied mouse strains such as C57BL/6. C.B10 K(b-/-)D(b-/-) mice immunized with a sublethal dose of L. monocytogenes were fully protected against a subsequent lethal infection. Adoptive transfer of Listeria-immune splenocyte subsets into naive K(b-/-)D(b-/-) mice indicated that CD8(+) T cells were the major component of this protective immune response. A CD8(+) T cell line isolated from the spleen of a Listeria-infected class Ia MHC-deficient mouse was shown to specifically recognize Listeria-infected cells in vitro, as determined by IFN-gamma secretion and cytotoxicity assays. Adoptive transfer of this T cell line alone resulted in significant protection against L. monocytogenes challenge. These results suggest that even a limited number of class Ib MHC-restricted T cells are sufficient to generate the rapid recall response required for protection against secondary infection with L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

10.
We have begun to dissect the cellular requirements for generation of immunity against enteric infection by Listeria monocytogenes using a novel T(-) B(-) NK(-) mouse strain (mice double deficient for the common cytokine receptor gamma-chain (gamma(c)) and the recombinase-activating gene-2 (RAG2/gamma(c) mice). Initial experiments showed that C57BL/6 mice and alymphoid RAG2/gamma(c) mice had similar kinetics of bacterial accumulation in the spleen, liver, and brain early after intragastric L. monocytogenes infection (up to day 3), calling into question the physiologic role of gut-associated lymphoid cells during the passage of this enterobacterium into the host. However, in contrast to C57BL/6 mice, RAG2/gamma(c) mice rapidly succumbed to disseminated infection by day 7. Polyclonal lymph node CD4(+) and CD8(+) alphabeta T cells were able to confer RAG2/gamma(c) mice with long-lasting protection against enteric L. monocytogenes infection in the absence of gammadelta T, NK, and NK-T cells. Moreover, these alphabeta T-reconstituted RAG2/gamma(c) mice produced IFN-gamma at levels comparable to C57BL/6 mice in response to L. monocytogenes both in vitro and in vivo. Protection was IFN-gamma dependent, as RAG2/gamma(c) mice reconstituted with IFN-gamma-deficient alphabeta T cells were unable to control enteric L. monocytogenes infection. Furthermore, alphabeta T cell-reconstituted RAG2/gamma(c) mice were able to mount memory responses when challenged with lethal doses of L. monocytogenes. These data suggest that NK, NK-T, gammadelta T, and B cells are functionally redundant in the immunity against oral L. monocytogenes infection, and that in their absence alphabeta T cells are able to mediate the early IFN-gamma production required for both innate and adaptive immunity.  相似文献   

11.
The role of endogenous IL-4 in resistance to Listeria monocytogenes infection was investigated by in vivo administration of an anti-IL-4 mAb (11B11). Mice treated with 0.01 to 0.4 mg of anti-IL-4 mAb before L. monocytogenes challenge demonstrated a significantly reduced peak bacterial burden in their livers and spleens and accelerated bacterial clearance from these organs. In addition, histopathologic damage to the liver was reduced. Maximal protection was achieved by i.p. injection of 0.1 mg of anti-IL-4 mAb 2 or 24 h before L. monocytogenes challenge; treatment with anti-IL-4 mAb after injection of L. monocytogenes had no effect on antilisterial resistance. Anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control Listeria-infected mice exhibited similar patterns of IFN-gamma, IL-2, and IL-4 mRNA, as determined by polymerase chain reaction amplification of RNA extracted from spleen cells. In both anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control mice, IFN-gamma, IL-2, and IL-4 mRNA were produced within 4 h after challenge. Cytokine mRNA levels were similar for anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control mice, except for the greater amount of IFN-gamma mRNA in the anti-IL-4 mAb-treated mice at 4 h after L. monocytogenes challenge. IFN-gamma and IL-2 mRNA levels were sustained for at least 5 days, whereas IL-4 mRNA was undetectable by 3 days after challenge. There were no significant differences in the amounts of IL-4 and IFN-gamma detected in culture supernatants of spleen cells from anti-IL-4 mAb-treated and control Listeria-infected mice. These results suggest that endogenous IL-4, a cytokine thought to be produced principally by Th2 cells, has a deleterious effect on host defense against the facultative intracellular pathogen L. monocytogenes. Administration of an anti-IL-4 mAb increases antilisterial resistance without causing a detectable shift to a Th1 type of cytokine response.  相似文献   

12.
T cell-dependent, cell-mediated immune mechanisms have been shown to contribute to resistance against malaria. Because the identity of plasmodial Ag responsible for the activation of these protective immune responses remains unknown, a major step in isolating these potential immunizing agents will be the development of adequate screening procedures designed to identify important T cell Ag. This study focused on the isolation of protective T cell clones that may play a pivotal role in this process. A T cell clone designated CTR2.1 and two subclones derived from it adoptively transferred protection to athymic nude mice infected with Plasmodium chabaudi adami, a murine malarial parasite known to be recognized by protective thymus-dependent immune mechanisms. The protective T cell clone displayed a L3T4+, Lyt-2- surface phenotype and secreted both IFN-gamma and IL-2 after stimulation with solubilized parasites in vitro. This is the first report of results demonstrating a cloned T cell line capable of providing adoptive protection against malaria in vivo. More importantly, CTR2.1 and other protective T cell clones may provide for the identification of plasmodial antigenic epitopes recognized by important cell-mediated immune mechanisms during acute malarial infection.  相似文献   

13.
The cell interactions that take place between Toxoplasma gondii trophozoites and the human immune system have been investigated by using an in vitro model of infection. PBMC were co-cultured with live, appropriately attenuated, trophozoites. When cells from immune (seropositive) donors were used, a proliferative response was observed. At the same time, the proliferating T cells proved capable of controlling the growth of live trophozoites. By contrast, cells from seronegative donors failed to mount a proliferative response and intracellular overgrowth of trophozoites with subsequent cell injury occurred. Actively proliferating T cells were expanded in continuous cell lines with IL-2 and periodical restimulation with Ag in the presence of autologous irradiated mononuclear cells. From some of the lines obtained, clones were also derived. Ten clones were selected for further studies. They proliferated in response to trophozoites but not to unrelated Ag. Their response required the presence of autologous monocytes-macrophages isolated from peripheral blood on Percoll density gradients. B cells that were obtained from the same donors and immortalized by EBV infection proved inefficient as APC. These data suggest that live trophozoites have to be processed by macrophages in order to be presented to T cells. Upon appropriate antigen stimulation, all of the clones produced IL-2 and IFN-gamma, a finding that was consistent with both their CD4+ surface phenotype and their helper capacity on B cell proliferation and differentiation in vitro. The supernatants of all of the stimulated clones released a factor that activated macrophages to kill intracellular trophozoites as well as an unrelated pathogen, Listeria monocytogenes. This factor was identified as IFN-gamma because it was neutralized by specific anti-IFN-gamma antibodies. The present in vitro model of response to live protozoa may prove suitable to assess the role of both T lymphocytes and macrophages in intracellular parasite infections in man. Furthermore, this experimental system may be applied to detect specific lesions of cell mediated immunity in a number of immunodeficiency syndromes.  相似文献   

14.
Cultures of T cells from Listeria monocytogenes-immune mice, macrophages, and heat-killed Listeria organisms produced a factor(s) capable of activating macrophage oxygen metabolism. The activity depended on the presence of Lyt 1+2,3- T cells in the primary culture. Macrophage oxygen metabolism could also be induced by a L. monocytogenes-specific T-cell clone which was recently shown to mediate anti-listerial protection in vivo and to secrete interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in vitro. Furthermore, macrophage activation was achieved by recombinant IFN-gamma. It is concluded that acquired resistance to facultative intracellular pathogens--at least in part--depends on the activation of macrophage oxygen metabolism by IFN-gamma derived from specific Lyt 1+2,3- T cells.  相似文献   

15.
In vitro expanded T cell lines were used to determine whether antigen-specific cytolytic T lymphocytes are generated after infection with the intracellular bacterium, Listeria monocytogenes. Spleen cells from infected mice were cultured in the presence of syngeneic accessory cells, listerial antigen, and interleukin 2 containing supernatants. Cell lines were greater than 98% Thy-1+, L3T4-, Lyt-2+. Bone-marrow macrophages were used as target cells in two in vitro cytolytic assay systems. The Lyt-2+ T cells killed bone marrow macrophages only when infected with L. monocytogenes as assessed in a 4-hr 51Cr release assay and in an 18-hr neutral red uptake assay. Cytolysis was blocked by anti-LFA-1 and anti-Lyt-2 monoclonal antibodies. These cytolytic T cells produced interferon-gamma after co-stimulation with antigen, accessory cells, and recombinant interleukin 2. Bone marrow macrophages infected with Mycobacterium bovis were not killed by T cells from L. monocytogenes-infected mice but by T cell lines from M. bovis-infected mice, indicating that cytolysis was antigen specific. L. monocytogenes-infected target cells of different haplotype were lysed by the Lyt-2+ T cells. By using a low cell density split culture system, antigen-specific, H-2-restricted cytolytic T cells could be identified. These findings demonstrate that during infection with intracellular bacteria, Lyt-2+ T cells with cytolytic activity are generated that may be involved in antibacterial protection.  相似文献   

16.
Listeria monocytogenes is a facultative intracellular bacterium that lives and grows in the cytoplasm of the host cell. The hallmark of a listerial infection is a cell-mediated immune response to its own secreted virulence factors. Thus, L. monocytogenes vaccines engineered to secrete HIV proteins may be ideal vectors for boosting cellular immune responses against HIV. Using strains of L. monocytogenes that stably express and secrete HIV Gag (Lm-Gag) to deliver this Ag to the immune system, we have previously shown strong MHC class I-restricted cytotoxic T cell responses to this protein. In this study, we examine MHC class II-restricted T cell responses to HIV-Gag delivered by Lm-Gag. We demonstrate the induction of CD4+ T cells that are HIV-Gag specific and identify three epitopes in two strains of mice, BALB/c (H-2d) and C57BL/6 (H-2b), two of which are both H-2d and H-2b restricted, but are not immunodominant for both haplotypes. In addition, we show that the CD4+ T cells induced are of the Th1 phenotype that produce IFN-gamma at levels similar to CD4+ T cells induced to endogenous listerial Ags. These studies suggest that chromosomally modified strains of L. monocytogenes may be useful as vaccine vectors for the induction of Th1 T cell responses against HIV.  相似文献   

17.
Mice sensitized with Propionibacterium acnes showed an enhanced resistance against infection with Listeria monocytogenes in contrast to the increased susceptibility to LPS-induced endotoxin shock. The enhanced protection to L. monocytogenes was mediated by activated innate immunity but not by generation of Listeria-specific acquired immunity. After infection with L. monocytogenes, the elimination of bacteria was observed earlier in accordance with a higher level of endogenous cytokine production in P. acnes-sensitized mice than in control mice. Peritoneal cells from P. acnes-sensitized mice produced a larger amount of IL-12p70 and nitric oxide after stimulation with heat-killed L. monocytogenes or peptidoglycan purified from Staphylococcus aureus. RT-PCR analysis showed that the expression of TLR2 but not TLR1, TLR4 nor TLR6 was induced by injection of P. acnes in peritoneal cells. These results indicated that P. acnes-sensitization could induce the activation of innate immunity against L. monocytogenes through increased recognition of bacterial components by TLR2.  相似文献   

18.
Secreted or nonsecreted Ag expressed by recombinant Listeria monocytogenes can prime CD8 T cells. However, Ag-specific memory CD8 T cells confer protection against bacteria secreting Ag, but not against bacteria expressing the nonsecreted form of the same Ag. This dichotomy may be explained by a long-standing hypothesis that nonsecreted Ags are less effective than secreted Ags at inducing a protective immune response at the onset of infection. We tested this hypothesis by examining whether these two different forms of Ag induce different primary and secondary CD8 T cell responses. The primary responses to secreted and nonsecreted Ags expanded and contracted almost synchronously, although the responses to nonsecreted Ags were of lower magnitude. These results demonstrate that the kinetics of the CD8 T cell response are similar regardless of whether Ag is accessible to the endogenous MHC class I pathway or can only be presented through cross-presentation. No differences were detected in the CD8 T cell recall response to L. monocytogenes expressing secreted or nonsecreted Ags. Nonsecreted Ags are as effective as secreted Ags at the induction of a rapid recall response by memory CD8 T cells. Thus, the inability of nonsecreted bacterial proteins to serve as protective Ags cannot be attributed to a defective CD8 T cell response.  相似文献   

19.
Seven T cell clones were established from mixed leukocyte cultures in which PBMC from two healthy donors and from one patient suffering from the hyper-IgE syndrome were stimulated by the irradiated EBV-transformed B cell lines JY or UD53. Five of seven T cell clones, after activation by co-cultivation with JY or UD53 cells, induced a low degree of IgE production by normal blood B cells. In one experiment in which the normal B cells could activate the T cell clones directly, IgE production was also observed in the absence of the specific stimulator cells. IgE production was also obtained with supernatants of the T cell clones collected 4 to 5 days after activation by their specific stimulator cells. In addition, the supernatants induced IgG, IgA, and IgM synthesis. All seven clones produced variable concentrations of IL-4 and IFN-gamma. The clones FA-28 and BG-39, which failed to induce IgE synthesis, produced, compared with the other clones tested, relatively high quantities of IFN-gamma (4700 and 2500 pg/ml, respectively). These high levels of IFN-gamma accounted for the lack of induction of IgE synthesis, because in the presence of a polyclonal anti-IFN-gamma antiserum, supernatants of FA-10 and BG-39 induced significant IgE production. In addition, the low degree of IgE production induced by supernatants of two other T cell clones (FA28 and BG24) was 15- and 3-fold enhanced, respectively, in the presence of the anti-IFN-gamma antiserum. IgE synthesis by normal B cells was also induced by rIL-4, indicating that IL-4 present in T cell clone supernatants was responsible for induction of IgE production. This notion was supported by the finding that IgE production induced by supernatant of BG-24 was strongly inhibited by a polyclonal anti-IL-4 antiserum. In contrast, IgG and IgA production induced by supernatant of BG-24 were not significantly affected by the anti-IL-4 antiserum. Only a slight inhibition of IgM synthesis was observed. Collectively, our results indicate that both recombinant and naturally produced IL-4 induce normal human B cells to synthesize IgE. However, final IgE production induced by T cell clone supernatants is the net result of the inducing and suppressive effects of IL-4 and IFN-gamma respectively, that are secreted simultaneously by the T cell clones upon activation.  相似文献   

20.
Using a murine model, we investigated the role of the bacterial exotoxin listeriolysin O (LLO) in cellular immunity to Listeria monocytogenes. A correlation between LLO production by infecting bacteria and generation of protective immunity to virulent LLO-producing bacteria was noted. Using isogeneic hemolysin (Hly+ or Hly-) strains of L. monocytogenes, we demonstrated that LLO production by infecting bacteria is required to elicit T cells reactive both to bacteria-associated Ag and to the secreted LLO molecule as measured by IL-2 production in vitro. Distinct sets of T cells specific for largely nonoverlapping pools of antigenic determinants represented by LLO and cell-associated Ag (heat-killed L. monocytogenes) are generated after infection. We have used models for prediction of T cell epitopes based on primary structure of LLO, and synthetic amphipathic LLO peptides were evaluated as Ag in vitro or as immunogenes in vivo. Infection of several strains of mice (H-2k and H-2d) with LLO-producing L. monocytogenes resulted in the generation of T cells that could respond consistently to two peptides, LLO 215-234 and LLO 354-371. Mouse strains lacking expression of I-E molecules (e.g., B10.A(4R) and C57BL/6) responded to LLO but not to the peptides tested. With C3HeB/FeJ mice, antibodies to I-Ek blocked the presentation of LLO 215-234. The importance of the N-terminal portion of LLO 215-234 was evidenced by the drastic reduction in antigenic activity of truncated peptides (e.g., LLO 221-234 and LLO 224-234). LLO 215-234, the strongest and most consistent activator of T cells from L. monocytogenes-immune mice, fit well some models for antigenic peptides in several ways. It could be predicted to form an amphipathic alpha-helix, it contained multiple "Rothbard motifs" (charged residue or glycine, two or three hydrophobic amino acids and then a glycine or polar residue), it had a net charge of +2, and it contained the correct spacing of amino acids (five to six residues between a hydrophobic and basic amino acid) that is characteristic of I-Ek-binding peptides. Immunization with 8 of 10 synthetic LLO peptides generated T cells that recognized the immunizing peptide in vitro, but such T cells were only poorly reactive with LLO. Our results indicate that LLO is an important target Ag for stimulation of CD4+ L. monocytogenes-specific T cells, and that LLO 215-234 is antigenically dominant in C3HeB/FeJ mice.  相似文献   

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