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1.
CD4(+) Th1 responses to virus infections are often necessary for the development and maintenance of virus-specific CD8(+) T-cell responses. However, in the present study with Friend murine retrovirus (FV), the reverse was also found to be true. In the absence of a responder H-2(b) allele at major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II loci, a single H-2D(b) MHC class I allele was sufficient for the development of a CD4(+) Th1 response to FV. This effect of H-2D(b) on CD4(+) T-cell responses was dependent on CD8(+) T cells, as demonstrated by depletion studies. A direct effect of CD8(+) T-cell help in the development of CD4(+) Th1 responses to FV was also shown in vaccine studies. Vaccination of nonresponder H-2(a/a) mice induced FV-specific responses of H-2D(d)-restricted CD8(+) cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Adoptive transfer of vaccine-primed CD8(+) T cells to naive H-2(a/a) mice prior to infection resulted in the generation of FV-specific CD4(+) Th1 responses. This novel helper effect of CD8(+) T cells could be an important mechanism in the development of CD4(+) Th1 responses following vaccinations that induce CD8(+) CTL responses. The ability of MHC class I genes to facilitate CD4(+) Th1 development could also be considerable evolutionary advantage by allowing a wider variety of MHC genotypes to generate protective immune responses against intracellular pathogens.  相似文献   

2.
We have used the Friend virus model to determine the basic mechanisms by which the immune system can control persistent retroviral infections. Previously we showed that CD4(+) T cells play an essential role in keeping persistent retrovirus in check. The present in vitro experiments with a Friend virus-specific CD4(+) T-cell clone revealed that these cells produce gamma interferon (IFN-gamma), which acts with two distinct mechanisms of antiviral activity. First, IFN-gamma had a direct inhibitory effect on virus production. This inhibitory effect was noncytolytic and, interestingly, was not associated with decreased cell surface expression of viral antigens. The second mechanism of IFN-gamma-mediated antiviral activity was an enhancement of CD4(+) T-cell-mediated cytolytic activity. We also found an in vivo role for IFN-gamma in the control of persistent Friend virus infections. Neutralization of IFN-gamma in persistently infected mice resulted in significantly increased levels of virus in the spleen, and a significant percentage of IFN-gamma-deficient mice were unable to maintain long-term control over Friend virus infections.  相似文献   

3.
Effective, vaccine-induced CD8+ T-cell responses should recognize infected cells early enough to prevent production of progeny virions. We have recently shown that Gag-specific CD8+ T cells recognize simian immunodeficiency virus-infected cells at 2 h postinfection, whereas Env-specific CD8+ T cells do not recognize infected cells until much later in infection. However, it remains unknown when other proteins present in the viral particle are presented to CD8+ T cells after infection. To address this issue, we explored CD8+ T-cell recognition of epitopes derived from two other relatively large virion proteins, Pol and Nef. Surprisingly, infected cells efficiently presented CD8+ T-cell epitopes from virion-derived Pol proteins within 2 h of infection. In contrast, Nef-specific CD8+ T cells did not recognize infected cells until 12 h postinfection. Additionally, we show that SIVmac239 Nef downregulated surface major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules beginning at 12 h postinfection, concomitant with presentation of Nef-derived CD8+ T-cell epitopes. Finally, Pol-specific CD8+ T cells eliminated infected cells as early as 6 h postinfection, well before MHC-I downregulation, suggesting a previously underappreciated antiviral role for Pol-specific CD8+ T cells.  相似文献   

4.
Bidentate interaction of a T-cell receptor and CD8alphabeta heterodimer with a peptide-MHCI complex is required for the generation of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. During thymic development, the modification of CD8beta glycans influences major histocompatibility complex class I binding to T-cell precursors called thymocytes. ES mass spectrometry (MS) and tandem MS/MS analysis were used to identify the changes occurring in the CD8beta-glycopeptides during T-cell development. Several threonine residues proximal to the CD8beta Ig headpiece are glycosylated with core-type 1 O-glycans. Non-sialylated glycoforms are present in immature thymocytes but are virtually absent in mature thymocytes. These results suggest how sialylation in a discrete segment of the CD8beta stalk by ST3Gal-1 sialyltransferase creates a molecular developmental switch that affects ligand binding.  相似文献   

5.
Cross-linking of CD8 and HLA class I molecules with appropriate monoclonal antibodies (mAb) and goat anti-mouse Ig (GaMIg) antibody resulted in a marked proliferation of resting human CD8 cells in the presence of interleukin-2 (IL-2). These cells also expressed IL-2 receptor (IL-2R), transferrin receptor, HLA-DR and -DQ antigens. Activation of the cross-linked CD8 cells is apparently independent of accessory monocytes. Various anti-CD8 and anti-HLA class I mAb recognizing nonpolymorphic antigenic determinants were examined for the efficacy of activating CD8 cells. Among mAb specific for HLA class I molecules, PA2.6, MB40.5, BB7.7, A1.4, and W6/32 mAb markedly stimulated the proliferation of cross-linked CD8 cells, whereas BBM.1, Q1/28, and HC10 mAb were found inactive. Footprinting analysis of HLA class I molecules suggested that the activity of these anti-HLA class I mAb appeared to be related to the corresponding peptides they protect from enzymatic digestion. In contrast to the anti-HLA class I mAb, all anti-CD8 mAb examined (C8, OKT8A, and anti-Leu-2a) induced the proliferation of CD8-HLA class I cross-linked cells with similar efficacy. These results suggest that physical interaction between CD8 and at least one specific region of HLA class I molecules can trigger the activation of resting human CD8 cells.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse, a spontaneous animal model for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, displays a tendency in common with human diabetic populations to develop autoimmune thyroiditis although incidence and severity of thyroid lesions vary widely among different colonies around the world. A congenic strain of NOD mice bearing I-Ak on a NOD background (NOD-H2(h4)) has recently been derived and displays a much greater tendency to develop thyroiditis and autoantibodies to mouse thyroglobulin (MTg) although it is free of diabetes. Both thyroid infiltrates and autoantibody formation are accelerated and enhanced in NOD-H2(h4) mice by increased iodine intake. The effect of increased iodine intake on NOD mice themselves has not been directly investigated although a recent study of these animals given high or low doses of iodine showed no follicular destruction unless the mice were first rendered goitrous by iodine deprivation. We found that dietary iodine increased both the incidence and the severity of thyroid lesions in our NOD mice although autoantibodies to MTg were absent. NOD background genes appear to be essential for the development of these lesions, which were maximal after 4 weeks of iodine administration and showed no significant regression when the iodine was stopped. Furthermore, our studies show for the first time that both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells are necessary for the development of this accelerated but essentially spontaneous murine thyroid disease.  相似文献   

8.
The CD8 coreceptor is important for positive selection of major histocompatibility complex I (MHC-I)-restricted thymocytes and in the generation of pathogen-specific T cells. However, the requirement for CD8 in these processes may not be essential. We previously showed that mice lacking beta(2)-microglobulin are highly susceptible to tumors induced by mouse polyoma virus (PyV), but CD8-deficient mice are resistant to these tumors. In this study, we show that CD8-deficient mice also control persistent PyV infection as efficiently as wild-type mice and generate a substantial virus-specific, MHC-I-restricted, T-cell response. Infection with vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which is acutely cleared, also recruited antigen-specific, MHC-I-restricted T cells in CD8-deficient mice. Yet, unlike in VSV infection, the antiviral MHC-I-restricted T-cell response to PyV has a prolonged expansion phase, indicating a requirement for persistent infection in driving T-cell inflation in CD8-deficient mice. Finally, we show that the PyV-specific, MHC-I-restricted T cells in CD8-deficient mice, while maintained long term at near-wild-type levels, are short lived in vivo and have extremely narrow T-cell receptor repertoires. These findings provide a possible explanation for the resistance of CD8-deficient mice to PyV-induced tumors and have implications for the maintenance of virus-specific MHC-I-restricted T cells during persistent infection.  相似文献   

9.
The control of acute and chronic Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is dependent on CD4(+) T cells. In a variety of systems CD8(+) T cell effector responses are dependent on CD4(+) T cell help. The development of CD8(+) T cell-mediated immune responses in the absence of CD4(+) T cells was investigated in a murine model of acute tuberculosis. In vitro and in vivo, priming of mycobacteria-specific CD8(+) T cells was unaffected by the absence of CD4(+) T cells. Infiltration of CD8(+) T cells into infected lungs of CD4(-/-) or wild-type mice was similar. IFN-gamma production by lung CD8(+) T cells in CD4(-/-) and wild-type mice was also comparable, suggesting that emergence of IFN-gamma-producing mycobacteria-specific CD8(+) T cells in the lungs was independent of CD4(+) T cell help. In contrast, cytotoxic activity of CD8(+) T cells from lungs of M. tuberculosis-infected mice was impaired in CD4(-/-) mice. Expression of mRNA for IL-2 and IL-15, cytokines critical for the development of cytotoxic effector cells, was diminished in the lungs of M. tuberculosis-infected CD4(-/-) mice. As tuberculosis is frequently associated with HIV infection and a subsequent loss of CD4(+) T cells, understanding the interaction between CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cell subsets during the immune response to M. tuberculosis is imperative for the design of successful vaccination strategies.  相似文献   

10.
The glycoprotein CD86 is an important costimulatory molecule that has been shown to be predominantly expressed on APCs, such as dendritic cells, macrophages, and B cells. More recently, CD86 was also detected on T cells in specific pathological conditions. The mechanisms of how CD86 might be induced and its functional role in T cells are not well understood. In the present study, we showed that treatment with IL-2 markedly upregulated CD86, but not CD80, in human CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. This upregulation occurred in the absence of bystander cells, and isolated naive CD4(+) or CD8(+) T cells exhibited different time-dependent CD86-expression patterns in response to IL-2. Upregulation of CD86 on activated T cells was reduced by Abs that block IL-2 and IL-2Rα (CD25), indicating a receptor-mediated mechanism. IL-2-dependent CD86 upregulation was blocked by pharmacological inhibitors of the NFAT and mammalian target of rapamycin pathways and was largely reduced by simultaneous exposure to IFN-α. Importantly, a marked increase in CD86 on T cells was also observed in vivo in IL-2-treated patients. In conclusion, IL-2 upregulates CD86 expression on human CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells via a receptor-dependent mechanism that involves the NFAT and mammalian target of rapamycin pathways.  相似文献   

11.
Recent studies of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific CD8(+) T cells have focused on responses to single, usually HLA-A2-restricted epitopes as surrogate measures of the overall response to HIV. However, the assumption that a response to one epitope is representative of the total response is unconfirmed. Here we assess epitope immunodominance and HIV-specific CD8(+) T-cell response complexity using cytokine flow cytometry to examine CD8(+) T-cell responses in 11 HLA-A2(+) HIV(+) individuals. Initial studies demonstrated that only 4 of 11 patients recognized the putative immunodominant HLA-A2-restricted p17 epitope SLYNTVATL, suggesting that the remaining subjects might lack significant HIV-specific CD8(+) T-cell responses. However, five of six SLYNTVATL nonresponders recognized other HIV epitopes, and two of four SLYNTVATL responders had greater responses to HIV peptides restricted by other class I alleles. In several individuals, no HLA-A2-restricted epitopes were recognized, but CD8(+) T-cell responses were detected to epitopes restricted by other HLA class I alleles. These data indicate that an individual's overall CD8(+) T-cell response to HIV is not adequately represented by the response to a single epitope and that individual major histocompatibility complex class I alleles do not predict an immunodominant response restricted by that allele. Accurate quantification of total HIV-specific CD8(+) T-cell responses will require assessment of the response to all possible epitopes.  相似文献   

12.
An automatic protein design procedure was used to compute amino acid sequences of peptides likely to bind the HLA-A2 major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I allele. The only information used by the procedure are a structural template, a rotamer library, and a well established classical empirical force field. The calculations are performed on six different templates from x-ray structures of HLA-A0201-peptide complexes. Each template consists of the bound peptide backbone and the full atomic coordinates of the MHC protein. Sequences within 2 kcal/mol of the minimum energy sequence are computed for each template, and the sequences from all the templates are combined and ranked by their energies. The five lowest energy peptide sequences and five other low energy sequences re-ranked on the basis of their similarity to peptides known to bind the same MHC allele are chemically synthesized and tested for their ability to bind and form stable complexes with the HLA-A2 molecule. The most efficient binders are also tested for inhibition of the T cell receptor recognition of two known CD8(+) T effectors. Results show that all 10 peptides bind the expected MHC protein. The six strongest binders also form stable HLA-A2-peptide complexes, albeit to varying degrees, and three peptides display significant inhibition of CD8(+) T cell recognition. These results are rationalized in light of our knowledge of the three-dimensional structures of the HLA-A2-peptide and HLA-A2-peptide-T cell receptor complexes.  相似文献   

13.
The off-rate (k(off)) of the T cell receptor (TCR)/peptide-major histocompatibility complex class I (pMHCI) interaction, and hence its half-life, is the principal kinetic feature that determines the biological outcome of TCR ligation. However, it is unclear whether the CD8 coreceptor, which binds pMHCI at a distinct site, influences this parameter. Although biophysical studies with soluble proteins show that TCR and CD8 do not bind cooperatively to pMHCI, accumulating evidence suggests that TCR associates with CD8 on the T cell surface. Here, we titrated and quantified the contribution of CD8 to TCR/pMHCI dissociation in membrane-constrained interactions using a panel of engineered pMHCI mutants that retain faithful TCR interactions but exhibit a spectrum of affinities for CD8 of >1,000-fold. Data modeling generates a "stabilization factor" that preferentially increases the predicted TCR triggering rate for low affinity pMHCI ligands, thereby suggesting an important role for CD8 in the phenomenon of T cell cross-reactivity.  相似文献   

14.
Sequences from exons encoding the peptide binding region of MHC class I (MHC-I) molecules were isolated from California gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) genomic DNA to initiate an investigation of variation in these genes in a cetacean. These represent the first mysticete MHC-I sequences to be reported. The analysis of gray whale MHC-I sequences suggests the presence of at least three loci, which share greatest similarity to MHC-I in the ungulates, consistent with current views on cetacean phylogenetics. The peptide binding region of MHC is the most polymorphic part of the molecule and analysis of the variation and synonymous to nonsynonymous substitution ratios in gray whale sequences found these genes to display polymorphism characteristics similar to that attributed to selection in other species.  相似文献   

15.
16.
MHC class I molecules are highly polymorphic within populations. This diversity is thought to be the result of selective maintenance of new class I alleles formed by gene conversion. It has been proposed that rare alleles are maintained by their ability to confer resistance to common pathogens. Investigation has focused on differences in the presentation of foreign Ags by class I alleles, but the majority of peptides presented by class I molecules are self peptides used in shaping the naive T cell repertoire. We propose that the key substrate for the natural selection of class I gene conversion variants is the diversity in immune potential formed by new alleles. We show that T cells compete with each other for niches in the thymus and spleen during development, and that competition between different clones is dramatically affected by class I mutations. We also show that peripheral naive T cells proliferate preferentially in the presence of the class I variant that directed T cell development. The data argue that class I gene conversion mutations dramatically affect both the development and the maintenance of the naive CD8 T cell repertoire.  相似文献   

17.
Thymic selection is controlled by the interaction between TCR and MHC/peptide. Strength and quality of the signal determine whether thymocytes are selected or deleted. The factors that contribute to this signal remain poorly defined. Here we show that fetal thymic organ cultures (FTOCs) derived from OT-I transgenic mice (the OT-I TCR is restricted by K(b)-SIINFEKL) on a K(b)D(b-/-) background support positive selection, but only when provided with soluble H-2K(b)-SIINFEKL complexes. Selection of CD8 T cells is independent of the valency of the ligand or its capability to coengage CD8 molecules. Both CD8alphaalpha and CD8alphabeta T cells are selected by H-2K(b)-SIINFEKL, but only CD8alphabeta cells are capable of releasing IFN-gamma in response to the same ligand. The alpha(4)beta(7) integrin is up-regulated on postselection thymocytes from FTOCs. After adoptive transfer, FTOC-derived OT-I CD8 T cells divide in response to the agonist peptide SIINFEKL. These results establish that CD8 T cells responsive to their nominal peptide-Ag can be generated in FTOC supplemented with soluble MHC class I molecules equipped with the same peptide.  相似文献   

18.
Mature CD4(+) and CD8(+) T lymphocytes are believed to build and express essentially identical surface alphabeta T-cell receptor-CD3 (TCR.CD3) complexes. However, TCR.CD3 expression has been shown to be more impaired in CD8(+) cells than in CD4(+) cells when CD3gamma is absent in humans or mice. We have addressed this paradox by performing a detailed phenotypical and biochemical analysis of the TCR.CD3 complex in human CD3gamma-deficient CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells. The results indicated that the membrane TCR.CD3 complex of CD8(+) T lymphocytes was conformationally different from that of CD4(+) lymphocytes in the absence of CD3gamma. In addition, CD8(+), but not CD4(+), CD3gamma-deficient T lymphocytes were shown to contain abnormally glycosylated TCRbeta proteins, together with a smaller, abnormal TCR chain (probably incompletely processed TCRalpha). These results suggest the existence of hitherto unrecognized biochemical differences between mature CD4(+) and CD8(+) T lymphocytes in the intracellular control of alphabetaTCR. CD3 assembly, maturation, or transport that are revealed when CD3gamma is absent. Such lineage-specific differences may be important in receptor-coreceptor interactions during antigen recognition.  相似文献   

19.
Stimulation of PBMC, in children recovering from acute measles, with autologous EBV-transformed and measles virus (MV)-infected lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL) expanded primarily MV-specific CD8+ T cells. A large number of CD8+ T cell clones were obtained either by passaging of bulk cultures at limiting dilutions or by direct cloning of PBMC without previous stimulation in bulk culture. The MV-specific CD8+ T cell clones responding in a proliferative and a CTL assay were found to be class I MHC restricted. In contrast, CD4+ MV-specific T cell clones, which were generated by the same protocol, recognized MV in association with class II MHC molecules. Analysis of processing requirements for Ag presentation to CD8+ and CD4+ T cell clones, measured by the effect of chloroquine in a proliferative T cell response, revealed that both types of T cells recognized MV Ag processed via the endogenous/cytoplasmic pathway. Thus, these studies indicate that, as in most other viral infections and in contrast to previous suggestions, the class I MHC-restricted CTL response by CD8+ T cells may be an important factor in the control and elimination of MV infection. Therefore, the role proposed for CD4+ class II-restricted T cells in recovery from measles needs to be reevaluated.  相似文献   

20.
Human rotavirus-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell responses in peripheral blood lymphocytes were studied using a flow cytometric assay that detects the intracellular accumulation of cytokines after short-term in vitro antigen stimulation. The frequencies of virus-specific T cells that secrete gamma interferon and interleukin-13 (IL-13) were determined in adults and children during the acute or convalescent phase of rotavirus-induced diarrhea, in asymptomatically infected adults and laboratory workers who worked with human stool samples containing rotavirus, and in healthy adults. Significantly higher frequencies of rotavirus-specific interferon gamma-secreting CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells, but not IL-13-secreting T cells, were detected in symptomatically infected adults and exposed laboratory workers than in healthy adults and children with acute rotavirus diarrhea. The levels of rotavirus-specific T cells returned to levels found in healthy adults by 32 days after the onset of rotavirus diarrhea in most adult subjects. Children with rotavirus diarrhea had undetectable or very low levels of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells that secrete gamma interferon. Adult cytomegalovirus-seropositive individuals had frequencies of cytomegalovirus-specific T cells that secrete gamma interferon that were approximately 20 times the level of rotavirus-specific T cells. This result suggests that rotavirus is a relatively poor inducer of circulating memory T cells that secrete gamma interferon. The frequencies of gamma interferon-secreting CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells and the frequencies of IL-13-secreting CD4(+) T cells responding to the T-cell superantigen staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) were lower in children than in adults. In both adults and children, the frequencies of CD4(+) cells secreting gamma interferon in response to SEB were higher than the frequencies of cells secreting IL-13.  相似文献   

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