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1.
An antibody response against a thymic-dependent Ag requires cognate recognition of the Ag by B and T cells. Functional T-B cell (T-B) interaction involves binding of Ag by B cell surface Ig, internalization and processing of Ag, expression of an Ag fragment in the context of Ia, binding of Ag/Ia by the TCR and binding of T cell-derived lymphokines by B cell lymphokine receptors. It is becoming increasingly evident that B and T cell accessory molecules also are involved in T-B interactions. To determine the role of accessory molecules in T-B collaboration, we have designed a system in which T-B interaction was artificially induced in the absence of carrier protein. TNP-modified, turkey gamma-globulin-specific, Th cells were allowed to form conjugates with TNP-specific B cells in the absence of hapten-carrier complex. Both B and T cells were induced to proliferate and B cells partially differentiated into antibody-secreting cells when B cells were cultured with TNP-modified but not unmodified T cells. The activation of B cells by TNP-modified T cells was not MHC restricted but was blocked by anti-Ia antibodies, suggesting a role for Ia distinct from Ag presentation. Furthermore, B cell proliferation was also inhibited by antibodies to L3T4 and LFA-1, suggesting a functional accessory role for these molecules in induction of B cell proliferation/differentiation.  相似文献   

2.
The mechanism of help for resting B cell growth in MHC-restricted T-B collaboration was investigated using an in vitro polyclonal model for these T cell-B cell interactions. In the presence of rabbit anti-mouse Ig, small, size-selected B cells elicit help from syngeneic Ia-restricted Th2 cell lines specific for F(ab')2 rabbit globulin. Both Ag-presenting and bystander B cells receive signals from stimulated Th cells that lead to B cell proliferation. The results suggest that the direct activation of resting Ag-presenting and bystander B cells by Th2 cells is mediated by a similar effector mechanism. Although proliferative responses by Ag-presenting B cells are of greater magnitude, help for both Ag-presenting and bystander B cell populations is characterized by the lack of a requirement for membrane Ig cross-linking, by identical kinetics, and by the necessity for direct cell contact or close proximity with Th cells. B cell proliferation is not induced by exposure to the sequence of diffusable mediators released from a synchronized Ag-specific T-B interaction. The T cell-dependent proliferation by both B cell populations can be inhibited by excess mitomycin C-treated syngeneic "cold target" B cells, demonstrating a requirement for a short-range T cell-B cell interaction. mAb inhibition experiments fail to identify a role for class II, LFA-1, or CD4 membrane molecules in the delivery of help to bystander B cells. Antibody against H2d bystander class II molecules has no effect on bystander B cell proliferation at concentrations that completely block Ag presentation by H2d B cells to an H2d-restricted Th cell line. Antibodies against the cell adhesion molecule LFA-1 or the Th cell molecule CD4 do inhibit bystander B cell proliferation, but only to the extent that they block T cell activation and the induction of help. The inductive stimulus leading to resting B cell growth results from an early, short-range interaction with Th cells. B cell proliferation is supported by T cell soluble mediators as a consequence of this interaction, which is required for at least 8 hr after T cell recognition of Ag/Ia on the surface of Ag-presenting B cells.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of subpopulations of murine spleen cells to stimulate a mixed lymphocyte response (MLR) was studied. It was found that T cells (nylon-nonadherent spleen cells) and B cells [G-10 passed and treated with rabbit anti-mouse brain serum (RAMB) and complement (C)] were poor stimulators of an MLR. In contrast, whole spleen cells or B cells plus adherent cells (RAMB +C-treated spleen cells) produced good stimulation. However, a non-T, radiation-resistant splenic adherent cell (SAC) population was up to 20 to 50 times more efficient as a stimulator of an MLR on a per cell basis than an unseparated spleen population. These SAC were shown to express Ia determinants encoded by genes in I-A and I-E/C. These results suggest that Ia+ SAC may be the predominant stimulating cells in spleen cell populations, and the preferential target for T cell recognition in cell interaction events.  相似文献   

4.
Engagement of the surface Ig receptor with anti-IgM antibodies stimulates murine B lymphocytes to markedly increase their expression of the cell adhesion molecules ICAM-1 and LFA-1. Stimulated B cells display increased homotypic adhesiveness and form spontaneous heterotypic conjugates with T lymphocytes. This latter T-B cell interaction is further enhanced if T cells have been previously activated with phorbol esters. In all cases, the formation of cell-cell conjugates is dependent on LFA-1-ICAM-1-mediated interactions as assessed in mAb blocking experiments. B lymphocytes stimulated with anti-IgM display a marked increase in binding to ICAM-1-transfected L cells. This cell-cell interaction is inhibited by anti-LFA-1 mAb binding to the B lymphocyte. Together, these results demonstrate that there is an induction of both ICAM-1 and LFA-1 on stimulated B cells and a corresponding increase in the adhesiveness of these cells. These findings suggest that Ag binding to the surface Ig receptor could prepare a B lymphocyte for subsequent interaction with a T lymphocyte. This provides insight into how efficient T-B collaboration may occur between very infrequent Ag-specific lymphocytes.  相似文献   

5.
We have examined the cytotoxic activity of anti-Iak serum and complement on various immune functions of BALB/c (H-2d) cells. Since the cytotoxic action of this antiserum on H-2d cells defines specificity Ia.7, an I-C region product, we have looked at the selective expression of this antigen. We have mainly used the in vitro anti-Lac2 response to study the cells involved in the induction and regulation of antibody. The data presented here show that Ia.7 is present on both IgM and IgG precursor B cells and in lesser amounts on plaque-forming cells. The antiserum also recognizes with less efficiency a product on specific T suppressor cells, which is possibly coded for by the adjacent I-J subregion. Both fluorescence and functional tests indicate the absence of Ia.7 on macrophages. It is also lacking on T helper cells. When we tested the antiserum on the in vitro cytotoxic responses to alloantigens, we found that neither T effector cells nor their precursors were affected.  相似文献   

6.
Ag-specific as well as Ia-restricted killing of certain APC by CD4+ T cells was investigated. The CD4-mediated killing is not only a characteristic of in vitro long term cultured T cell lines or clones, but is also manifest after in vivo priming. Thus, CD4+ killer T cells are generated in vivo as well. CD4+ killer T cells are detected in the Th1, but not in the Th2 subset, and they do not appear to lyse Ia+ APC or bystander cells by a pathway mediated by secreted T cell factors. The latter observation is demonstrated by cold target inhibition experiments as well as by the failure of puromycin to inhibit killing, if applied in doses which completely block lymphokine secretion. Ia+ APC differ in their susceptibility to lysis. Transformed APC are usually better lysed than nontransformed APC. Unstimulated B cells are not killed, while LPS-stimulated B cell blasts are killed. The results of cold target inhibition and bystander killing experiments suggest that CD4+ killer T cells are activated by the common pathway, i.e., by Ag presented in the context of Ia, but killing requires the recognition of additional determinant(s) on APC. It is proposed that these killing-inducing determinants are continuously expressed on most transformed Ia+ cells and on nontransformed but stimulated APC.  相似文献   

7.
A single monoclonal T helper (Th) clone can activate B cells in two distinct pathways; a cognate pathway requiring a major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted T-B cell interaction, and a noncognate pathway not requiring an MHC-restricted T-B cell interaction. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether Th cells mediating a given immune response provide further regulatory function to B cells other than helper function. It was demonstrated that conditions of high antigen concentration which activate a noncognate B cell activation pathway simultaneously inhibit IgG responses. The inhibition is shown to be mediated by the T cell factor interleukin 4, produced by activated cloned Th cells. The inhibitory effect of this factor is directed to B cells and is MHC-unrestricted, antigen-nonspecific, and IgG class-specific. In addition to being susceptible to the effects of augmenting cells and suppressor cells, cloned Th cell populations can therefore themselves function as regulatory cells to inhibit IgG responses when stimulated with high dose of specific antigen. These results indicate that Th cells function to regulate B cells both positively and negatively, depending upon the activation conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The immunodeficiency syndrome murine AIDS (MAIDS), caused by the BM5 retrovirus preparation, involves the activation, division, and subsequent anergy of the entire CD4(+) T cell population as well as extensive B cell hyperproliferation and hypergammaglobulinemia, resulting in splenomegaly and lymphadenopathy, followed many weeks later by death. The development of MAIDS requires CD4(+) T cells and MHC class II expression by the infected host, supporting a role for T-B interaction in disease development or progression. To explore this possibility, we examined development of MAIDS in mice deficient in CD4 (CD4 knockout), in which T-B interactions are compromised. We find that in CD4 knockout hosts, BM5 causes T cell immunodeficiency in the remaining T cells but has only a limited ability to induce B cell phenotypic changes, hyperproliferation, hypergammaglobulinemia, or splenomegaly. There is also delayed death of infected mice. This implies that CD4 dependent T-B interaction is needed to induce the B cell aspects of disease and supports a multistep mechanism of disease in which B cell changes follow and are caused by CD4(+) T cell effects.  相似文献   

9.
The present study examined the functional role of Ia antigens on B cells in polyclonal B cell activation induced by a B cell differentiation factor, B151-TRF2. The polyclonal IgM PFC responses by B151-TRF2 were inhibited by monoclonal antibodies specific for class II MHC antigens (Ia antigens) but not class I MHC antigens. Such inhibition by anti-Ia antibodies was haplotype-specific and was observed in the absence of both T cells and accessory cells. Moreover, the anti-Ia antibody-induced inhibition of the B151-TRF2 responses was not due to the blocking of binding of B151-TRF2 to the corresponding B cell receptor. A series of kinetic studies revealed that some Ia-mediated cellular activation process occurs before the resting B cells become responsive to B151-TRF2. Thus, the B151-TRF2-mediated B cell responses consist of at least two distinct phases. The early phase is an Ia-dependent but B151-TRF2-independent process, whereas the late phase is an Ia-independent but B151-TRF2-dependent process. To further characterize the functional role of Ia antigens on B cells, an additional experiment was carried out by using F1 B cells which co-dominantly express both parental Ia antigens on the surface. Interestingly, it was observed that the degree of inhibition of the B151-TRF2-mediated responses of F1 B cells by anti-parental Ia antibody was, at best, one-half that of the parental B cells, suggesting that F1 B cells may be separated into two subpopulations with the restriction specificity for the respective parental Ia antigens. To examine this possibility, (B10 X B10.BR)F1 B cells were separated into adherent and nonadherent cell populations by their ability to bind to either one of the parental B cell monolayers, and the specificity of inhibition of their responses to B151-TRF2 by anti-Ia antibodies was assessed. It was found that the responses of (B10 X B10.BR)F1 B cells adherent to the B10 B cell monolayer or the B10.BR B cell monolayer were almost completely inhibited by anti-I-Ab and anti-I-Ak antibodies, whereas those of nonadherent cells were now selectively inhibited by anti-I-Ak and anti-I-Ab antibodies, respectively. These findings are interpreted as indicating that the B151-TRF2-responsive F1 B cells consist of at least two subpopulations with the restriction specificity for either one of the parental Ia antigens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
A subpopulation of antigen-presenting macrophages required for an in vitro antibody response to burro erythrocytes was deleted by pretreating the splenic macrophages with anti-Ia serum and complement (C). The in vitro response of the macrophage depleted T-B cell population could not be restored by the addition of macrophages resistant to anti-Ia antibodies and C (Ia-). The response of Ia- macrophages and the macrophage-depleted T-B cells was only reconstituted by the addition of Ia+ macrophages. Macrophages pretreated with anti-Ia antibodies restricted to react with determinants of one I subregion could not support the in vitro antibody response when added to cultures whose macrophages were pretreated with anti-Ia serum and C specific for the I-J subregion. These results confirmed that Ia determinants of the I-A, the I-E, and the I-C subregions were all expressed on the I-J+ macrophage required for an in vitro antibody response.  相似文献   

11.
Characterizing the individual B cells that participate in the production of anti-HLA Abs requires isolation and culture of these cells and a suitable assay for detection of Abs produced in these B cell cultures. We previously showed that B cell precursors, programmed for anti-HLA Ab secretion, are present at measurable frequencies in peripheral blood of women immunized by pregnancy. In this study, we show that tetrameric HLA-A2, although designed for characterization of CTLs, provides a suitable affinity ligand for isolation of allospecific B cells, which subsequently can be induced to produce HLA-A2 Ab in a CD40-driven culture system. The validity of this concept was established by assaying human hybridomas, producing anti-HLA Abs, for specific tetrameric HLA-A2 binding. The availability of anti-HLA Ab-producing B cell cultures that are established without immortalization will be of value when T-B cell interaction is studied at an alloantigen-specific level.  相似文献   

12.
When bone marrow and spleen cells of 4 week-old mice are fractionated on a discontinuous BSA gradient, a small fraction of Ia- cells is obtained which can be induced in vitro to express the Ia alloantigen within 2 hr. This is in precise parallel to the prothymocyte induction system of Komuro and Boyse. Ia specificity is ascertained by the use of two reciprocal antisera, A.TH anti-A.TL (anti-Iak) and A.TL anti-A.TH (anti-Ias), which yield the expected reaction pattern on induced bone marrow cells of (B6 X A)F1 (Iak) and SJL/J (Ias) mice. Induction can be effected by a number of agents, such as catecholamines, prostaglandin PGE1, cAMP, bacterial endotoxin, lipid A, ubiquitin, and thymopoietin. The last requires a 100-fold higher concentration for Ia+ induction as compared to prothymocyte induction, thus implying a lower affinity for the B cell receptor than for the thymocyte receptor. Ia- to Ia+ conversion involves cells different from prothymocytes, as indicated by: 1) the specific cytolytic effect of our anti-Ia sera which were shown to be free of activity against thymocytes; 2) an additive cytolytic effect of anti-Ia and anti-Thy-1 sera; and 3) the fact that the Ia inducible cells are sensitive to pretreatment with anti-immunoglobulin and C. This finding that Ia- precursor cells are already Ig+ is of interest for the B cell ontogeny, as it implies that Ig expression precedes Ia expression.  相似文献   

13.
Class II (Ia) major histocompatibility complex molecules are cell surface proteins normally expressed by a limited subset of cells of the immune system. These molecules regulate the activation of T cells and are required for the presentation of antigens and the initiation of immune responses. The expression of Ia in B cells is determined by both the developmental stage of the B cell and by certain external stimuli. It has been demonstrated previously that treatment of B cells with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) results in increased surface expression of Ia protein. However, we have confirmed that LPS treatment results in a significant decrease in mRNA encoding the Ia proteins which persists for at least 18 h. Within the upstream regulatory region of A alpha k, an NF-kappa B-like binding site is present. We have identified an LPS-induced DNA-binding protein in extracts from athymic mice whose spleens consist predominantly of B cells. Binding activity is present in low levels in unstimulated spleen cells and is increased by LPS treatment. This protein binds to two sites in a regulatory region of the Ia A alpha k gene, one of which contains the NF-kappa B-like binding site. DNA fragments containing these sites cross-compete for protein binding. Analysis by DNase I footprinting identified a target binding sequence, named the LPS-responsive element. Although this target sequence contains an NF-kappa B-like binding site, competition with a mutant oligonucleotide demonstrated that bases critical for NF-kappa B binding are not required for binding of the LPS-inducible protein. Therefore, we hypothesized that this inducible protein represents a new mediator of LPS action, distinct from NF-kappa B, and may be one mechanism to account for the decrease in mRNA encoding the Ia proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The effector mechanism of skin allograft rejection has been characterized as Ag specific, rejecting cells that express the target alloantigen but sparing those that do not. However, the rejection of MHC class II disparate skin grafts, in which very few cells (Langerhans cells) actually express the target Ia Ag could conceivably proceed by either one of two distinct rejection mechanisms. One possibility is that Ia- cells are destroyed by a sequence of events in which CD4+ T cells, activated by Ia+ LC, elaborate soluble factors that are either directly cytolytic or that recruit and activate non-specific effector cells. The alternative possibility is that activated CD4+ T cells elaborate soluble factors which induce Ia expression on Ia- cell populations, and that these Ia+ cells are subsequently destroyed by effector cells specific for the induced Ia alloantigens. We found that rejection of Ia+ LC was not of itself sufficient to cause rejection of skin grafts, indicating that skin allograft rejection is contingent on the destruction not only of LC but of other graft cell populations as well. We then investigated whether CD4+ T cells rejected allogeneic skin grafts in an antigen specific fashion. To do so, we engrafted immunoincompetent H-2b nude mice with trunk skin grafts from B6----A/J allophenic mice because such skin is composed of mutually exclusive cell populations expressing either H-2a or H-2b histocompatibility Ag, but not both. The engrafted mice were subsequently reconstituted with H-2b CD4+ T cells. The CD4+ T cells destroyed keratinocytes of A/J origin but spared keratinocytes of B6 origin, even though neither cell population constitutively expresses target IAk alloantigen. The targeted rejection of A/J keratinocytes but not of B6 keratinocytes indicates that the target Ia alloantigen must have been induced on Ia- A/J keratinocytes, rendering them susceptible to destruction by anti-Iak-specific CD4+ effector cells. These data demonstrate that CD4+ T cell rejection of skin allografts is mediated by Ag-specific CD4+ cytolytic T cells and hence, requires the induction of target Ia alloantigens on epidermal cells within the graft.  相似文献   

15.
A central event in humoral responses is the Ag-mediated interaction of Th cells and B cells. This interaction leads to the activation of both cell types and results in cytokine secretion by the T cells and proliferation and secretion of Ig by the B cells. The proliferative and differentiative responses of B cells are dependent on contact-mediated signals and cytokines provided by the activated Th cells. Although the role of cytokines in B cell activation and differentiation is understood, the nature of the signals delivered by the activated Th cells and the molecules involved in this process are not known. In this study we have examined Ag-mediated "cognate" T-B cell interactions as well as B cell activation induced by contact with preactivated and fixed Th lymphocytes. Our results indicate that both the T cell surface molecules lymphocyte function associated Ag-1 and CD2 are important in the activation of T cells by Ag presented by B lymphocytes. This indicates that B cells have similar characteristics as other APC. However, once the T cells are activated, contact-mediated stimulation of resting B lymphocytes (the noncognate phase) is dependent on CD2 but not lymphocyte function associated Ag-1. Two lines of evidence indicate this; first, it is inhibited by blocking of CD2 on the T cells and, second, such stimulation is not efficiently mediated by a CD2- Th cell line. Thus, CD2 plays an obligatory role at several discrete stages of T cell-mediated activation of resting B lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
In this report we report the identification of novel molecular associations involving the MHC class II (Ia) Ag expressed on the surface of Ag-presenting B lymphocytes. Biosynthetically radiolabeled murine B cells were incubated for 2 h in the presence or absence of T lymphocytes before treatment with the cleavable cross-linking reagent dimethyl-3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate. Anti-Ia immunoprecipitates of solubilized cell extracts revealed novel cross-linked products of Mr 90,000 to 95,000 which, upon cleavage of the cross-linker, could in part be resolved into native Ia and other structures of approximately Mr 67,000. The detection of the cross-linked products was significantly enhanced in B cells that had been co-cultured with T lymphocytes, but not with other cell types, and co-culture with various monoclonal T cell lines resulted in different levels of enhancement. Detection of the 90- to 95-kDa cross-linked products appeared to be independent of the foreign Ag for which the T cells were specific and could be enhanced when either cell type was replaced by a plasma membrane fraction, indicating that it resulted from direct cell-cell contact. These results suggest that some proportion of the Ia glycoproteins expressed on the surface of B cells become associated with other structures of Mr 67,000 upon Ag-non-specific interactions between T and B lymphocytes.  相似文献   

17.
It has been assumed that physical interaction between B cells and helper T cells in the presence of specific antigen is an early and essential step in the physiologic antibody response to thymus-dependent antigens. The present studies were designed to examine this physical interaction by employing carrier-specific T hybridoma cells that can provide help to highly enriched hapten-binding B cells. Direct conjugation of the B and T cells can be visualized at both the light and electron microscopic level and the number of conjugates can be directly quantified. Before their effective conjugation with T cells, the B cells must be incubated with specific antigen for 4 to 6 hr. After this time, the T cells form conjugates with the B cells within 5 min. Conjugate formation requires hapten specificity, carrier specificity, covalent linkage between hapten and carrier, and is MHC restricted. Two types of T-B conjugates were observed by electron microscopy: an antigen-independent attachment of B cell microvilli to small portions of the T cell surface and an antigen-dependent, intimate apposition of large areas of the plasma membranes of the T and B cells. The kinetics of development of the two modes of interaction suggest that the second type may be important for signal transduction, since the number of T and B cells showing intimate interactions increases with time. Monoclonal antibodies directed against Thy-1.2, LFA-1 alpha, L3T4, and I-A partially block conjugation of the two cell types, suggesting that these surface molecules are involved in T-B interaction.  相似文献   

18.
To appreciate better the mechanisms by which B lymphocytes are activated by anti-Ig antibodies, we characterized seven monoclonal mouse allo-antibodies to IgD of the a allotype for their isotypes, fine specificities, IgD-cross-linking abilities, avidities, and abilities to activate B cells in vitro and in vivo. Three of the monoclonal antibodies tested bound to the Fc fragment of IgD with relatively high avidity and were effective at cross-linking IgD, since they precipitated soluble IgD and rapidly capped B cell membrane IgD. These were the only antibodies tested that induced B cell DNA synthesis in vitro and were the most effective antibodies at inducing in vivo increases in B cell size and DNA synthesis and in vitro and in vivo increases in B cell surface Ia expression. Two antibodies bound to the Fd fragment of IgD with relatively high avidity but could not rapidly cap cell membrane IgD or precipitate soluble IgD even in the presence of 2% polyethylene glycol. These high-avidity, poorly cross-linking antibodies were unable to stimulate B cell DNA synthesis in vitro and were much less effective than the first group of anti-delta antibodies at stimulating in vivo increases in B cell DNA synthesis, size, or surface Ia expression or in vitro increases in surface Ia expression. One antibody, which bound to the Fc fragment of IgD with an intermediate avidity, was unable to rapidly cap B cell membrane IgD or precipitate soluble IgD in saline, but could precipitate soluble IgD in the presence of 2% polyethylene glycol. This antibody failed to induce B cell DNA synthesis in vitro and was as effective as the higher-avidity, poorly cross-linking antibodies at stimulating increases in B cell size, surface Ia expression, and DNA synthesis in vivo, and surface Ia expression in vitro. One antibody, which bound to the Fd fragment of IgD with low avidity and was unable to precipitate soluble IgD or to cap cell membrane IgD, had little ability to activate B cells by any of the parameters studied. Each of the monoclonal anti-delta antibodies, regardless of isotype or fine specificity, when bound to agarose to increase its ability to cross-link IgD, was mitogenic for B cells in vitro. None of the monoclonal antibodies to IgD of the a allotype stimulated B cells from b allotype mice to increase their size, surface Ia expression, or synthesis of DNA in vitro or in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
B cell hybridomas with Ia and IgM molecules on the cell membrane were treated with either purified goat anti-mouse mu antibody (anti-mu) or monoclonal rat anti-mouse IgM antibody (anti-IgM). The spontaneous uptake of [3H] thymidine by these cells was markedly inhibited by both reagents. These hybrid cells could be induced to differentiate into IgM-secreting cells in the presence of these reagents at high frequency. Furthermore, the induction of IgM secretion by B cell hybridomas treated with these antibodies was completely T cell independent, and cell division was not required for the differentiative response to anti-mu. In addition, F(ab')2 fragments of anti-mu showed more effects on proliferation and differentiation of these cells than intact anti-mu. Interestingly, TH2.54, a subline of B cell hybridomas, could generate IgG2a production as well as IgM when incubated with anti-mu. These findings suggest very strongly that the interaction of either goat anti-mu or monoclonal rat anti-IgM with surface IgM molecules on the cell membrane of the B cell hybridomas inhibits in vitro spontaneous proliferation, and results in providing signals for differentiation into Ig-secreting cells without T cell factors.  相似文献   

20.
Ia antigens seem to control immune responses on at least two levels. First, they influence the antigen recognition repertoire of the T cells. Second, their variable expression on certain antigen-presenting cells is a powerful regulatory mechanism for the local immune reaction. This is particularly important in the central nervous system (CNS) in which no Ia antigens are normally expressed. Recent experiments in this context have shown that astrocytes are able to express Ia antigens during interaction with T cells, and that they function as antigen-presenting cells. The Ia-inducing activity is produced by activated T cells, and can be replaced by immune interferon (IFN-gamma). In this study we report on the functional and kinetic relationship between Ia antigen expression on astrocytes and the immune-specific activation of T cells by astrocytes. Normal resting astrocytes were found to be negative for Ia antigens by immunofluorescence and by biochemical criteria. Moreover, they are only able to stimulate T cells after they have been induced to express Ia antigens by a signal from the T cells, which is probably mediated by IFN-gamma. In conclusion, the immune-specific interaction between astrocytes and T lymphocytes is a sensitively controlled system that might be pivotal to the development of immune responses in the brain. Malfunction of the system could be an important factor in the pathogenesis of aberrant immune reactions in the CNS, e.g., in multiple sclerosis.  相似文献   

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