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1.
Two major pathways, the T cell receptor and the T11 alternate pathway, allow for T cell activation. In the human thymus, the T cell antigen receptor complex is reduced or absent on immature thymocytes, whereas the T11 glycoprotein is present at high cell surface density on all thymocytes. To determine whether activation through the T11 pathway induces similar or different changes in mature and immature thymocytes, we fractionated thymocytes according to their surface expression of the T3-T cell receptor (T3/Ti) complex. We report that two populations, one with high and one with low T3/Ti expression, can be activated through the T11 pathway to undergo nuclear activation and express IL 2 receptors. Moreover, in the absence of accessory cells, only the most mature population, expressing high T3 density, could be induced to proliferate, whereas the subset representing immature cortical thymocytes required accessory cells for proliferation. These findings suggest that the cellular microenvironment may have a critical role in regulating the activation of immature cortical thymocytes and that this cell population may not represent "nonfunctional" dead end cells, but rather a valid intermediate in human thymic differentiation.  相似文献   

2.
The role of IL 1 in the antigen-specific activation of class II-restricted T lymphocytes was examined by using a model system consisting of cloned WEHI 5 B lymphoma accessory cells and class II-restricted, soluble antigen- or alloantigen-reactive T cell clones. The addition of exogenous recombinant IL 1 to the T cell cultures resulted in a significant enhancement of the antigen-specific T cell proliferation response, but at best, only small increases in IL 2 release. Goat IgG anti-IL 1 antibodies were added to the T cell cultures to assess their effect on T cell activation. The IL 1 enhancement of the T cell proliferation response was inhibited by the anti-IL 1 antibodies in a dose-dependent manner. In contrast, only modest levels (10 to 25%) of proliferation inhibition were observed in T cell cultures containing either WEHI 5 or splenocyte accessory cells but no exogenous IL 1. When the anti-IL 1 antibodies were added to primary mixed lymphocyte cultures stimulated by WEHI 5 cells in the absence of exogenous IL 1, no significant inhibition of proliferation was observed. A small but statistically significant proliferation inhibition was observed when anti-IL 1 antibodies were added to mixed lymphocyte reaction cultures stimulated by splenocytes. Two-color cytofluorometric analysis of the effects of IL 1 on antigen-activated T cell clones demonstrated that under suboptimal stimulation conditions, IL 1 stimulated a small but significant increase in the number of T cells bearing IL 2 receptors. In the presence of optimal numbers of WEHI 5 accessory cells, IL 1 enhanced T cell proliferation in the absence of a detectable increase in the number of T cells bearing IL 2 receptors, the number of IL 2 receptors per T cell, or the levels of IL 2 released. Finally, exogenous IL 1 can be added as late as 18 to 24 hr after culture initiation without significantly reducing its ability to enhance the T cell proliferation response. These data indicate that IL 1 has pleiotropic effects on murine T lymphocytes and can function to enhance T cell activation at multiple points during the activation sequence.  相似文献   

3.
Previous studies have indicated that the human thymus is composed of several discrete compartments. Cortical thymocytes are reactive with the monoclonal antibody anti-T6, whereas most medullary cells, unreactive with anti-T6, stain brightly with anti-T3 antibody, which defines mature T cell populations. By using an indirect immune rosette method, we isolated the minor thymocyte population (1 to 2% of all thymocytes) lacking both T3 and T6 but expressing T11 antigens. These cells could be maintained in culture supplemented with recombinant IL 2 (Rec-IL 2) for several days. Under these conditions, T3-T6- cells were shown to undergo phenotypic changes. In the absence of thymic macrophage (Mo), T3+ and T8+ thymocytes appeared in culture, whereas the development of T4+ cells strictly required the presence of Mo. The expression of T4 antigen could be largely prevented by the addition of anti-HLA-DR antibody, further indicating that Ia+ accessory cells had the ability to promote in vitro development of T4+ thymocytes. In the presence of Mo, not only T4+ but also T8+ cells were obtained. Double fluorescence staining with anti-T8-FITC and anti-T4-biotin demonstrated that after 12 days of culture, T4 and T8 antigens were mutually exclusive. Furthermore, during the course of these studies, we observed that under the culture conditions utilized (e.g., presence or absence of Mo), T3-T6-thymocytes failed to express the T6 antigen. Thus, the in vitro development of T cells bearing a mature phenotype could be obtained in the absence of intermediate expression of cortical (T6+) thymocytes.  相似文献   

4.
Previous studies have indicated that the human thymus is composed of several discrete compartments. Cortical thymocytes are reactive with the monoclonal antibody anti-T6, whereas most medullary cells, unreactive with anti-T6, stain brightly with anti-T3, which defines mature T cell populations. Only a minor thymocyte population lacks both T3 and T6 but expresses T11 antigens. Within the thymus, several proliferating lymphoblasts are present. In addition a distinct subset shows the capacity to proliferate in response to mitogens. By continuous Percoll density gradient centrifugation, we have obtained a cell fraction comprising the vast majority of cells able to proliferate spontaneously or after PHA stimulation. By a panning procedure performed with anti-T3 and anti-T6 antibodies, three phenotypically distinct thymocyte subsets were separated from this fraction, and their functional capabilities were tested. The spontaneous proliferating activity was found to be mainly attributable to thymocytes unable to respond to mitogen, expressing the cortical T6 marker and lacking receptors for IL 2. T3-positive cells are able to respond to mitogen. However, these thymocytes are incapable of producing the adequate amount of IL 2 required to fully saturate their intrinsic proliferative capability. Surprisingly, the phenotypically least mature intrathymic T lymphocytes (T3 and T6 negative) respond to phytomitogen, at least in part, in an interleukin-dependent manner. It is noteworthy that a large proportion of these T3- and T6-negative thymocytes express IL 2 receptors and class II MHC antigens without in vitro activation. These novel findings have potential implications in the context of current models of differentiation pathways within the human thymus.  相似文献   

5.
In nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, T cells play a major role in mediating autoimmunity against pancreatic islet beta-cells. We and others previously reported that age-related alterations in the thymic and peripheral T cell repertoire and function occur in prediabetic NOD mice. To study the mechanism responsible for these T cell alterations, we examined whether a defect exists in the thymus of NOD mice at the level of TCR-mediated signaling after activation by Con A and anti-CD3. We found that thymocytes from NOD mice respond weakly to Con A- and anti-CD3-induced proliferation, compared with thymocytes from control BALB/c, BALB.B, (BALB.B x BALB.K)F1, C57BL/6, and nonobese non-diabetic mice. This defect correlates with the onset of insulitis, because it can be detected at 7 to 8 weeks of age, whereas younger mice displayed a normal T cell responsiveness. Thymic T cells from (NOD x BALB/c)F1 mice, which are insulitis- and diabetes-free, exhibit an intermediate stage of unresponsiveness. This T cell defect is not due to a difference in the level of CD3 and IL-2R expression by NOD and BALB/c thymocytes, and both NOD CD4+ CD8- and CD4- CD8+ mature thymic T cells respond poorly to Con A. BALB/c but not NOD thymic T cells respond to Con A in the presence of either BALB/c or NOD thymic APC, suggesting that the thymic T cell defect in NOD mice is intrinsic to NOD thymic T cells and is not due to an inability of NOD APC to provide a costimulatory signal. The defect can be partially reversed by the addition of rIL-2 to NOD thymocytes. To determine whether a defect in signal transduction mediates this NOD thymic T cell unresponsiveness, we tested whether these cells elevate their intracellular free Ca2+ ion concentration in response to Con A. An equivalent Con A-induced increase in Ca2+ ion concentration in both NOD and BALB/c thymocytes was observed, suggesting a normal coupling between the CD3 complex and phospholipase C in NOD thymocytes. In contrast to their low proliferative response to Con A or anti-CD3, NOD thymocytes respond normally (i.e., as do BALB/c thymocytes) to the combinations of PMA plus the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin and PMA plus Con A but weakly to Con A plus ionomycin. Our data suggest that the age-related NOD thymocyte unresponsiveness to Con A and anti-CD3 results from a defect in the signaling pathway of T cell activation that occurs upstream of protein kinase C activation.  相似文献   

6.
Human thymus is composed of several discrete compartments. Stage III thymocytes, located mainly in the medulla, stain brightly with anti-T3 monoclonal antibody; stage II thymocytes, located in the cortex, are T3- but react with T6 antibodies. The earliest identifiable intrathymic cell (stage I) expresses the sheep erythrocyte glycoprotein T11 but not T6 or T3 antigens. Within the thymus a phenotypically heterogeneous pool of proliferating lymphoblasts is present. This capacity to proliferate without in vitro activation is mainly attributable to thymocytes unable to respond to mitogens and expressing the cortical T6 marker. Both T3+ and T3-T6- cells respond to mitogen. However, in order to exhibit maximal proliferative responses, T3+ but not T3-T6- thymocytes require the addition of exogenous IL 2. Thymocyte subsets at distinct stages of intrathymic differentiation were then analyzed for glucocorticoid (GC) receptor content by using a whole cell assay with 3H-triamcinolone acetonide as tracer. The least mature T3-T6- thymocyte subset contained the highest levels of GC receptors . T3+ thymocytes exhibited a receptor content higher than that found in T6+ cells and similar to that reported for peripheral blood lymphocytes. Apart from the number, the GC receptor sites in all thymocyte subsets were similar in their affinities, kinetic characteristics, specificity for steroids, and ability to undergo translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus, and they behave in all these respects like binding sites of GC receptors in lymphoid and other cells. Independently of both phenotype and GC receptor content, all in vivo activated thymocytes (i.e., spontaneously proliferating cells) were similarly sensitive to the steroid inhibitory action in vitro. Both in the presence and in the absence of exogenous IL 1 or IL 2, the PHA-induced mitogenesis of T3-T6- cells was less inhibited by GC than that of T3+ thymocytes. Exogenous IL 1 and IL 2 were equally effective in removing, although not completely, the GC inhibition on T3-T6- proliferative responses to PHA. Relative to T3+ cell mitogenesis, only exogenous IL 2 was able to antagonize the steroid inhibitory action. The capacity observed in vitro of GC to differentially affect the proliferative potential or the cell viability of thymocytes belonging to functionally distinct subsets suggests that these hormones could regulate the intrathymic maturative pathways. Finally, although at present the physiologic relevance of the highest expression of GC receptors in intrathymic precursor cells remains unclear, the receptor density may be considered a marker of differentiation for the T lymphoid lineage.  相似文献   

7.
Recent studies have demonstrated that the 50KD T11 molecule is a surface component of a macrophage-independent alternative pathway of human T cell activation that is unrelated to the T3/Ti antigen-MHC receptor complex. Given the expression of T11 on all human thymocytes, it was of interest to determine whether they could be activated via this pathway. The triggering of T11 by monoclonal antibodies anti-T112 and anti-T113, directed at two unique epitopes on the molecule, induced IL 2 receptor expression on both T3+ and T3- thymocytes but did not induce IL 2 production. Consequently, in contrast to peripheral blood T cells, thymocytes did not proliferate in response to anti-T112 and anti-T113 in the absence of exogenous IL 2. These studies suggest that IL 2 receptor gene activation precedes IL 2 gene activation in T cell development. The ability of the alternative pathway of T cell activation to induce IL 2 receptor expression on T3- thymocytes implies that the T11 molecule may have an important role in early thymocyte ontogeny.  相似文献   

8.
The role of LFA-1/ICAM-1 interactions during murine T lymphocyte development.   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
We have examined the expression and function of the cell adhesion molecules LFA-1 (CD11a/CD18), ICAM-1 (CD54), and ICAM-2 in murine fetal thymic ontogeny and in the adult thymus. On fetal days 14 and 15, 40 to 50% of thymocytes coexpress high levels of LFA-1 and ICAM-1, as determined by flow cytometry. By day 16, more than 90% of fetal thymocytes are LFA-1+ ICAM-1hi, and all IL-2R+ cells are located in this population. Although LFA-1 expression remains unchanged thereafter, ICAM-1 expression appears to be differentially regulated in different thymocyte subpopulations, with CD4+8+ cells being ICAM-1lo and CD4-8- thymocytes remaining ICAM-1hi. ICAM-2 surface expression is dull on both fetal and adult thymocytes. Surprisingly, the expression of ICAM-1 is differentially up-regulated on T cells having a mature phenotype in thymus and in peripheral lymphoid organs, with CD8+ T cells bearing the highest amount of surface ICAM-1. Addition of anti-ICAM-1 or anti-LFA-1 antibodies to fetal thymic organ cultures results in the impaired generation of CD4+8+ cells. These results indicate that LFA-1/ICAM-1 interactions facilitate murine thymic development and suggest that cell adhesion molecules mediate important events in T cell differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
Human thymus tissue was examined from 7 wk of gestation through birth for the expression of antigens reacting with a panel of anti-T cell monoclonal antibodies. Additionally, the reactivities of reagents against the transferrin receptor, against leukocytes, against low m. w. keratins, and against major histocompatibility complex antigens were studied on human fetal thymic tissue. Frozen tissue sections were evaluated by using indirect immunofluorescence assays. At 7 wk of gestation, no lymphoid cells were identified within the epithelial thymic rudiment; however, lymphoid cells reacting with both antibody 3A1, a pan T cell marker, and antibody T200, a pan leukocyte reagent, were identified in perithymic mesenchyme. After lymphoid colonization of the thymic rudiment at 10 wk of fetal gestation, fetal thymic tissue reacted with antibodies T1, T4, and T8. At 12 wk of gestation, antibodies T3, T6, A1G3 (anti-p80, a marker of mature thymocytes), and 35.1 (anti-E rosette receptor) all reacted with thymic tissue. Our findings indicate that T cell antigens were acquired sequentially on thymocytes at discrete stages during the first trimester of human fetal development. The 3A1 antigen was present on fetal lymphocytes before lymphoid cell colonization of thymic epithelium, suggesting that passage through the thymus was not required for the expression of the 3A1 antigen by T cell precursors. The appearance of mature T cell antigens, T3 and p80, on thymocytes by 12 wk of gestation implies that the T cell antigen repertoire may be established in the thymus during the first trimester. Thus, a critical period of T cell maturation appears to occur between 7 and 12 wk of human fetal gestation.  相似文献   

10.
Alveolar macrophages (AM) from the majority of human volunteers are defective antigen presenting cells (APC) in T cell proliferation assays despite the display by the cells of HLA-D region antigens. We have confirmed that AM secrete relatively little interleukin 1 (IL 1), but addition of exogenous IL 1 did not improve the capacity of AM to initiate antigen-induced T cell proliferation. Thus, the presence of HLA-D region antigens and IL 1 is not sufficient to enable an accessory cell to act as an APC. We developed a T cell-accessory cell binding assay to investigate early events in T cell activation. AM demonstrated a diminished capacity as compared with monocytes to bind antigen-specific T cell clones. Nevertheless, AM often induced proliferation of T cell clones as effectively as monocytes, indicating that antigen display was intact. The inefficiency of AM in bind T cell clones correlated with their reduced capacity to induce resting T cells to express IL 2 receptors, secrete IL 2, and proliferate in response to antigen. Indirect immunofluorescence established that similar percentages of AM and monocytes expressed LFA molecules, but the density of the molecules was greater on monocytes than AM. A role for LFA antigens in the physical binding of T cells to monocytes was demonstrated by blocking antigen-specific binding with a monoclonal antibody to LFA-1 antigen. LFA-1 antibody also blocked the low levels of specific binding between AM and T cell clones, indicating that LFA-1-ligand interactions were operative between these two cell types. These studies indicate that there are critical cell membrane characteristics that promote binding of T cells to APC in addition to T cell receptor-antigen interactions. This combination of nonspecific and specific interactions leads to avid T cell-APC binding that may be essential for activation of resting T cells. Furthermore, we postulate that the failure to AM to act as effective APC results from an inability to bind T cells efficiently.  相似文献   

11.
The requirements for activation of human peripheral blood T cells by the mitogenic monoclonal antibody OKT3 were examined. OKT3 binds to a T cell molecule, T3, associated with the T cell antigen receptor and involved in T cell activation. Activation of T cells by OKT3 requires signals provided by accessory cells and is IL 2 dependent. In the presence of accessory cells, OKT3 induces loss of T3 molecules from the cell surface, production of IL 2, expression of IL 2 receptors, and proliferation. Modulation of T3 molecules by OKT3 can be induced in the absence of accessory cells with anti-mouse IgG. These T cells, however, are not induced to express IL 2 receptors or secrete IL 2. The addition of IL 1 induces expression of IL 2 receptors, but does not induce IL 2 secretion or proliferation. Thus, peripheral blood T cells appear to have different requirements for activation compared with antigen-specific T cell clones that can be induced to produce IL 2 when stimulated with OKT3 and IL 1. Expression of IL 2 receptors does not require modulation of T3 molecules, because the binding of OKT3 to T cells in the presence of IL 1 alone is sufficient to induce IL 2 receptor expression. The results suggest that IL 2 secretion depends on cross-linking and modulation of T3 molecules, and additional, as yet undefined, accessory cell signals. The expression of IL 2 receptors and proliferation of T cells can be induced in the absence of these signals when exogenous IL 2 is provided.  相似文献   

12.
Foxn1Delta/Delta mutants have a block in thymic epithelial cell differentiation at an intermediate progenitor stage, resulting in reduced thymocyte cellularity and blocks at the double-negative and double-positive stages. Whereas naive single-positive thymocytes were reduced >500-fold in the adult Foxn1Delta/Delta thymus, peripheral T cell numbers were reduced only 10-fold. The current data shows that Foxn1Delta/Delta peripheral T cells had increased expression of activation markers and the ability to produce IL-2 and IFN-gamma. These cells acquired this profile immediately after leaving the thymus as early as the newborn stage and maintained high steady-state proliferation in vivo but decreased proliferation in response to TCR stimulation in vitro. Single-positive thymocytes and naive T cells also had constitutively low alphabetaTCR and IL7R expression. These cells also displayed reduced ability to undergo homeostatic proliferation and increased rates of apoptosis. Although the frequency of Foxp3+CD4+CD25+ T cells was normal in Foxn1Delta/Delta mutant mice, these cells failed to have suppressor function, resulting in reduced regulatory T cell activity. Recent data from our laboratory suggest that T cells in the Foxn1Delta/Delta thymus develop from atypical progenitor cells via a noncanonical pathway. Our results suggest that the phenotype of peripheral T cells in Foxn1Delta/Delta mutant mice is the result of atypical progenitor cells developing in an abnormal thymic microenvironment with a deficient TCR and IL7 signaling system.  相似文献   

13.
IL-6 has been demonstrated by in vitro studies to be a cytokine involved in thymocyte activation We show herein that thymocytes cultured at high concentrations in the absence of comitogen respond to IL-1 and, to a lesser degree, to GM-CSF, by producing IL-6. This phenomenon disappears rapidly with decreasing cell densities, suggesting the involvement of a minor cellular component of the thymus which may be solely responsible for or cooperate in IL-6 production. We have analysed several thymic subpopulations for IL-6 production and show that accessory cells, and eventually their precursors, are the major if not exclusive, producers of this cytokine. Mature steroid-resistant thymocytes do not secrete IL-6. Production of IL-6 by total CD4-CD8- thymic cells is largely reduced by the depletion of mature accessory cells which express I-A and Mac-1 antigens. As shown previously, accessory cell precursors within the CD4-CD8- compartment are induced to differentiate into M phi and DC in response to IL-1 and GM-CSF. We provide evidence that this maturation is associated with IL-6 production. Thymic DC and phagocytic cells of the thymic reticulum (P-TR) in vitro produce high levels of IL-6 which are enhanced by GM-CSF or IL-1. These factors have a synergistic effect on IL-6 production by total thymocytes, and on CD4-CD8- cells that are not depleted for mature I-A+ Mac-1+ accessory cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Conventional vaccines afford protection against infectious diseases by expanding existing pathogen-specific peripheral lymphocytes, both CD8 cytotoxic effector (CTL) and CD4 helper T cells. The latter induce B cell maturation and antibody production. As a consequence, lymphocytes within the memory pool are poised to rapidly proliferate at the time of a subsequent infection. The "thymic vaccination" concept offers a novel way to alter the primary T cell repertoire through exposure of thymocytes to altered peptide ligands (APL) with reduced T cell receptor (TCR) affinity relative to cognate antigens recognized by those same TCRs. Thymocyte maturation (i.e. positive selection) is enhanced by low affinity interaction between a TCR and an MHC-bound peptide in the thymus and subsequent emigration of mature cells into the peripheral T lymphocyte pool follows. In principal, such variants of antigens derived from infectious agents could be utilized for peptide-driven maturation of thymocytes bearing pathogen-specific TCRs. To test this idea, APLs of gp33-41, a Db-restricted peptide derived from the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) glycoprotein, and of VSV8, a Kb-restricted peptide from the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) nucleoprotein, have been designed and their influence on thymic maturation of specific TCR-bearing transgenic thymocytes examined in vivo using irradiation chimeras. Injection of APL resulted in positive selection of CD8 T cells expressing the relevant viral specificity and in the export of those virus-specific CTL to lymph nodes without inducing T cell proliferation. Thus, exogenous APL administration offers the potential of expanding repertoires in vivo in a manner useful to the organism. To efficiently peripheralize antigen-specific T cells, concomitant enhancement of mechanisms promoting thymocyte migration appears to be required. This commentary describes the rationale for thymic vaccination and addresses the potential prophylactic and therapeutic applications of this approach for treatment of infectious diseases and cancer. Thymic vaccination-induced peptide-specific T cells might generate effective immune protection against disease-causing agents, including those for which no effective natural protection exists.  相似文献   

15.
The GTPase Rho has a critical regulatory role in thymus development.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
The present study employs a genetic approach to explore the role of Rho GTPases in murine thymic development. Inactivation of Rho function in the thymus was achieved by thymic targeting of a transgene encoding C3 transferase from Clostridium botulinum which selectively ADP-ribosylates Rho within its effector domain and thereby abolishes its biological function. Thymi lacking functional Rho isolated from C3 transgenic mice were strikingly smaller and showed a marked (90%) decrease in cellularity compared with their normal litter mates. We also observed a similar decrease in levels of peripheral T cells in C3 transgenic mice. Analysis of the maturation status of thymocytes indicated that differentiation of progenitor cells to mature T cells can occur in the absence of Rho function, and both positive and negative selection of T cells appear to be intact. However, transgenic mice that lack Rho function in the thymus show maturational, proliferative and cell survival defects during T-cell development that severely impair the generation of normal numbers of thymocytes and mature peripheral T cells. The present study thus identifies a role for Rho-dependent signalling pathways in thymocyte development. The data show that the function of Rho GTPases is critical for the proliferative expansion of thymocytes. This defines a selective role for the GTPase Rho in early thymic development as a critical integrator of proliferation and cell survival signals.  相似文献   

16.
T lymphocytes arise in the thymus and seed to peripheral lymphoid organs as fully functional cells at the time of exit. In humans, the thymus begins to function very early in ontogeny and releases large numbers of T cells before the time of birth. However, the vast majority of developing thymocytes (>95%) die within the thymus as a result of stringent selection processes. Positive selection imposes self-MHC-restriction on thymocytes and dictates the MHC-restricted repertoire of post-thymic T cells. Negative selection results in deletion of autoreactive cells. Both types of selection depend on cell to cell contracts and on the presence of appropriate growth factors which are still largely undetermined. Cell to cell contacts occur between developing thymocytes and cells of the thymic microenvironment (accessory cells), and are mediated by several receptor/ligand interactions which subserve the function of establishing and stabilizing these contacts. Besides MHC-TCR interactions, adhesion molecules are important for thymocyte maturation, selection and activation, and for the export and peripheral homing of mature T cells produced in the thymus. Here we describe a novel integrin involved in thymocyte-thymic epithelial cell interactions.  相似文献   

17.
Splenic T cells proliferate in response to the anti-I-Ab reactive T cell hybridoma T1.203 in an H-2-restricted but MHC antigen-independent manner. We propose that this anti-idiotypic response is mediated by "Type 2 autoreactive" T cells that are induced in peripheral lymphoid tissues following interaction with the particular idiotype expressed by the anti-self-I-A T cells. Thus, we define this phenomenon as an idiotype-restricted MHC-related cell interaction. To study the ontogeny of this response, we examined the distribution of Type 2 autoreactive cells. Spleen and lymph node but not thymic C57BL/6 T cells vigorously proliferate to T1.203. Mature (PNA-) as well as immature (PNA+) thymic T cells respond poorly. The frequency of cells responding to T1.203 is far greater in the spleen than in the thymus. The responding T cells were of both Lyt 1+ and Lyt 2+ T phenotype. The results suggest that Type 2 autoreactive cells are induced in peripheral lymphoid tissues following interaction with anti-I-A autoreactive T cells which escape from the thymus or develop in the periphery.  相似文献   

18.
To establish the role of the membrane-associated form of IL 1 in T cell activation, we tested the accessory function of monocytes (Mo) that were unable to secrete or release soluble IL 1. The data obtained show that strictly purified resting T cells start to proliferate in response to anti-CD3 antibody (OKT3) stimulation in the presence of paraformaldehyde (PFA)-fixed Mo or 3-day cultured Mo (macrophages). The findings that i) PFA-fixed Mo did not produce or release IL 1, ii) the accessory function of PFA-fixed Mo could be inhibited with pretreatment with anti-IL 1 antibody, iii) PFA-fixed Mo had a comitogenic effect in the murine thymocyte assay, and iv) there was a temporal difference between the capacities to function in the comitogenic assay and to produce soluble IL 1, suggest that human Mo can express membrane-associated IL 1 and that it is functionally relevant.  相似文献   

19.
Autoimmune mice homozygous for the lpr/lpr (lpr) gene develop a profound lymphadenopathy resulting from the accumulation of immature Thy-1+ Lyt-2- L3T4- cells in peripheral lymphoid tissues. The source of these cells is not known although the presence of a thymus is necessary to manifest both the lymph node enlargement and the autoimmunity. For this reason and the fact that the abnormal lpr cell phenotypically resembles immature thymocytes, we studied the thymus in lpr mice. Adult lpr thymuses were found to contain an immature population phenotypically identical to the peripherally accumulating cells, including the expression of B220 and Pgp-1 antigens as well as the presence of surface T cell receptor molecules as defined by the antibody KJ16-133. Evidence is presented that some of these lpr precursor T cells are capable of intrathymic differentiation, whereas the vast majority are exported unchanged to the lymph nodes where a portion differentiate further into mature T cells. This lpr-specific lineage could be distinguished from a normal component of the lpr thymus by surface phenotype and immunohistology. The results suggest that the massive accumulation of cells in lpr lymph nodes is not so much the result of abnormal proliferation of T cells as abnormal intrathymic differentiation. In addition, a minor subpopulation of normal Lyt-2- L3T4- thymocytes was identified that resembles the phenotype of the lpr cell and similarly expresses surface T cell receptor molecules. The presence of two parallel lineages in the lpr thymus thus also provides insight into normal T cell development.  相似文献   

20.
Nedjic J  Aichinger M  Klein L 《Autophagy》2008,4(8):1090-1092
During T cell development in the thymus, scanning of peptide/major histocompatibility (MHC) molecule complexes on the surface of thymic epithelial cells ensures that only useful (self-MHC restricted) and harmless (self-tolerant) thymocytes survive. In recent years, a number of distinct cell-biological features of thymic epithelial cells have been unraveled that may have evolved to render these cells particularly suited for T cell selection, e.g., cortical epithelial cells use unique proteolytic enzymes for the generation of MHC/peptide complexes, whereas medullary epithelial cells "promiscuously" express otherwise tissue-restricted self-antigens. We recently showed that macroautophagy in thymic epithelial cells contributes to CD4 T cell selection and is essential for the generation of a self-tolerant T cell repertoire. We propose that the unusually high constitutive levels of autophagy in thymic epithelial cells deliver endogenous proteins to MHC class II molecules for both positive and negative selection of developing thymocytes.  相似文献   

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