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1.
The administration of azobenzenearsonate-modified syngeneic spleen cells (ABA-SC) intravenously induces a population of first order hapten-specific inducer suppressor T cells (Ts1), which downregulate various aspects of T-cell-mediated immune responses via a well defined suppressor-T-cell pathway. In this study, we investigated the effects of these suppressor cells on the generation of ABA-specific cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) and helper T cells (Th) in vivo. We found evidence for functional impairment of ABA-activated Th and ABA-specific CTL precursors (CTLp) in the suppressed animals by a number of different in vitro criteria. Functional analysis of ABA-specific CTLp and ABA-activated Th in suppressed animals revealed that ABA-specific Ts inhibit the generation of CTL by impairing the antigen-specific activation of Th, which may in turn, prevent the clonal expansion of antigen-specific CTLp. The significance of these findings in relationship to our understanding of the cellular interactions necessary for the generation of CTL and the mode of action and mechanisms of suppressor T cells is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The role and induction requirements of helper T lymphocyte responses to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) was examined. Splenocytes from mice that had been primed in vivo with infectious HSV-1 can be restimulated in vitro with live or partially UV-inactivated HSV-1 to generate high levels of herpes virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity. By comparison, naive splenocytes or splenocytes taken from mice primed with heat-inactivated HSV-1 failed to generate CTL after in vitro viral stimulation. In addition, infectious HSV-primed splenocytes can be rendered unresponsive to secondary in vitro restimulation by pretreatment with anti-Lyt-1 antiserum plus complement. Spleen cells were taken from mice that had been primed and restimulated in vivo with infectious HSV-1. Two days after the second priming, splenocytes were prepared and irradiated. These cells were capable of assisting in the generation of CTL to varying degrees in all of the above unresponsive populations of cells. The irradiated cells did not produce detectable levels of CTL activity when cultured alone with antigen. Also, if the irradiated splenocytes were treated with anti-Lyt-1 plus complement before their addition to cultures, all restorative activity was ablated. In contrast, irradiated splenocytes from mice that had been primed and restimulated in vivo with either heat-inactivated or UV-inactivated HSV-1 were unable to provide help to naive or helper-depleted cultures. The failure to supply helper activity appears not to involve the preferential activation of suppressor cells, as evidenced by cell mixing experiments and the addition of concentrated, antigen-stimulated spleen cell supernatant fluids to secondary anti-HSV-1 splenocyte cultures. Proliferative assays using interleukin 2- (IL 2) dependent cell lines as a measure of relative helper activity indicated that the inactivated forms of HSV-1 were incapable of effectively enlisting helper activity. These experiments therefore suggest that the observed failure of heat-inactivated or UV-inactivated HSV-1 preparations to induce anti-HSV CTL responses reflects the inability of the HSV-1-specific subset of helper T lymphocytes to recognize these forms of the antigen.  相似文献   

3.
The role of L3T4+ (CD4+) Th cells in generation of CTL specific for discrete minor histocompatibility Ag was investigated. Suppression of the function of Th cells in vivo by chronic treatment with anti-L3T4 mAb prevented congenic strains of mice from being primed and from generating CTL specific for Ag encoded by the minor histocompatibility loci--H-3, H-1, and B2m. Analysis of proliferative responses and lymphokine secretion of cells from animals primed with one of these minor H Ag, beta 2-microglobulin, but not treated with anti-L3T4 antibodies, indicated that L3T4- class I MHC-restricted T cells were themselves responsible for the very great majority of the observed minor H Ag-specific proliferation and secretion of lymphokines associated with both T cell proliferation and activation of CTL. All together, the data indicate that in responses against discrete minor H Ag, L3T4+Th-independent CTL are generated through an L3T4+Th-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

4.
Primary and secondary cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses to minor alloantigens can be suppressed by priming host mice with a high dose (10(8) cells) of alloantigenic donor spleen cells (SC). Such suppression is antigen specific and transferable into secondary hosts with T cells. One interpretation of this is that antigen-specific host suppressor T cells (Ts) are activated. Alternatively, donor Lyt-2+ T cells, introduced in the priming inoculum, may inactivate host CTL precursors (CTLp) that recognize the priming (donor) alloantigens. Donor cells that act in this way are termed veto T cells. The experiments described here exclude veto T cell participation in transferable alloantigen-specific suppression, and demonstrate the operation of an alloantigen-specific host-derived T suppressor (Ts) cell. The origin of the Ts has been studied directly by using Thy-1-disparate BALB/c mice. The cell responsible for the transfer of suppression of a secondary CTL response to B10 minors was of the host Thy-1 allotype, and so originated in the host spleen and was not introduced in the priming inoculum. Secondly, antigen-specific Ts generated in CBA female mice against B10 minors could act on CTL responses to an unequivocally non-cross-reactive-third party antigen (H-Y), provided the two antigens were expressed on the same cell membrane. Such third-party suppression is incompatible with the operation of veto T cells. Depletion of Thy-1.2+ or Lyt-2+ cells from the suppression-inducing donor SC inoculum did not abrogate suppression induction in BALB/c mice; instead, suppression was enhanced. The demonstration of veto cell activity in similarly primed mice by other groups of investigators indicates that both types of suppression may operate. However, our results show that only antigen-specific Ts can mediate the transferable suppression of CTL responses to alloantigens.  相似文献   

5.
The present study demonstrated the presence of two suppressor circuits in the regulation of the in vitro activation and differentiation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL); these suppressor circuits were mediated by prostaglandins (PG) and antigens, respectively. In intrinsic suppression, the activation of cytotoxic precursor cells was regulated by the host endogenous production of PG. When the regulation by PG was removed (e.g., using indomethacin), lymphokine-induced cytotoxic cells (LICC) were generated. This activation process can be induced in the absence of antigen or mitogen stimulation. In extrinsic suppression, the presence of antigen induced the generation of antigen-nonspecific suppressor T cells to restrict the expansion of antigen-unrelated cytotoxic lymphocyte clones, whereas the antigen-specific CTL clones were spared. The generation of antigen-specific helper cells further augmented the antigen-specific CTL response. These findings indicate that both antigen specific suppressor T cells and antigen nonspecific suppressor T cells are involved in the regulation of CTL responses. These suppressor circuits not only play an active role in monitoring the activation of CTL clones, they also help to determine the specificity and magnitude of the CTL response.  相似文献   

6.
MHC-I (Ld)-restricted, S28-39-specific CTL responses are efficiently primed in H-2d BALB/c mice injected with low doses of native hepatitis B surface Ag (HBsAg) lipoprotein particles without adjuvants. Priming of this CTL response by exogenous HBsAg required CD4+ T cell "help" and IL-12: this CTL response could be neither induced in mice depleted of CD4+ T cells by in vivo Ab treatment, nor in (CD4+ T cell-competent or CD4+ T cell-depleted) IL-12-unresponsive STAT4-/- knockout BALB/c mice. Codelivery of oligonucleotides (ODN) with immunostimulating CpG sequences (ISS) with exogenous HBsAg reconstituted the CTL response to exogenous HBsAg in CD4+ T cell-depleted normal mice and in CD4+ T cell-competent and CD4+ T cell-depleted STAT4-/- BALB/c mice. Injection (by different routes) of "naked" pCI/S plasmid DNA encoding HBsAg into IL-12-responsive or -unresponsive BALB/c mice efficiently primed the MHC-I-restricted, HBsAg-specific CTL response. CTL priming was not detectable when CD4+ T cell-depleted animals were subjected to genetic immunization. In vivo priming of the well-characterized CD8+ CTL response to HBsAg in "high responder" BALB/c mice either by exogenous surface lipoprotein particles or by DNA vaccination is thus CD4+ T cell dependent. CTL priming by exogenous HBsAg, but not by genetic immunization, is IL-12 dependent. The dependence of CTL priming by exogenous HBsAg on CD4+ T cells can be overcome by codelivering ODN with ISS motifs, and this "adjuvants effect" operates efficiently in IL-12-unresponsive mice. The data characterize a feature of the adjuvant effect of ISS-containing ODN on CTL priming that may be of major interest for the design of CTL-stimulating vaccines with efficacy in immunodeficiency conditions.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of an azobenzenearsonate (ABA)-specific suppressor T cell factor, a soluble extract from first order suppressor T cells (Ts1), and suppressor molecules produced by a long-term T cell hybridoma to regulate ABA-specific granuloma formation was studied. ABA-derivatized syngeneic spleen cells (ABA-SC) administered subcutaneously induced persistent delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) responses, detected by footpad swelling and hapten-specific granuloma formation by 72 and 96 hr after challenge with ABA-bovine serum albumin coupled to polyacrylamide beads (ABA-BSA-PAB). Soluble factors from ABA-specific Ts1 prevented DTH and granulomatous development after subcutaneous administration of ABA-SC. Moreover, the in vivo administration of a factor that is derived from a Ts1 functioning hybrid cell line induced a second set of suppressor cells (Ts2) that upon transfer to syngeneic ABA-primed mice were able to inhibit granuloma formation in the footpad, as well as in the gastrointestinal tract after challenge with ABA-BSA-PAB. These experiments demonstrate the dependence of the granulomatous reaction on T cell-mediated events, as well as the potential therapeutic efficacy of an antigen-specific suppressor T cell factor and a hybridoma T cell product in limiting antigen-specific granuloma formation in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Influenza virus-specific CTL were primed in vivo by immunization with short synthetic peptides representing major CTL epitopes from the nucleoprotein of type A influenza virus. The resultant CTL after in vitro boosting of primed spleen cells recognized both virus-infected and peptide-pulsed target cells. The requirement of CD4+ T cell activation was investigated in several ways. First the addition of helper epitopes to the CTL epitope did not enhance CTL generation, suggesting that helper activity was either not limiting or not required. However, in vivo depletion of CD4+ T cells completely inhibited the generation of CTL by peptide immunization. The inclusion of anti-CD4 in the in vitro restimulation with peptide also prevented the generation of CTL, whereas in vitro reactivation of virus immune spleen cells with peptide was not inhibited by anti-CD4. Thus there appears to be heterogeneity in the requirement of CD4+ T cell proliferation in CTL generation. One possibility is that virus infected cells can stimulate higher affinity T cells that are less helper T cell dependent.  相似文献   

9.
The alloantigen-induced suppressor function of cells from 3-day mixed leukocyte culture (MLC) was studied. These cells, when co-cultured with normal syngeneic lymphocytes and cells of the same haplotype as the original inducing alloantigen, inhibited the generation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). Suppression was mediated by a radiation-resistant Lyt-2+ T cell. The suppressor T cells appeared to act by inhibiting the clonal expansion of CTL precursors in the responder cell population, determined by limiting dilution analysis. Levels of endogenous interleukin 2 (IL 2) in co-cultures with suppressor T cells were diminished, and the addition of exogenous IL 2 to co-cultures cancelled the suppressor T cell effects. The suppressor cell population was shown to be capable of absorbing IL 2 from lymphokine preparations, and in contrast to mitogen-induced suppressor T cells, after exposure to IL 2 the allostimulated suppressor T cell remains active. The results are discussed in terms of possible modes of action of the suppressor T cell.  相似文献   

10.
An in vitro study has been made of the mechanism by which a suppressor T cell, that is induced in lymph nodes by a syngeneic splenic cell antigen, prevents generation of cytotoxic T cells specific for hapten-altered self antigens. When popliteal lymph node cells exposed in vivo to syngeneic splenic cells were immunized in vitro with heat-treated syngeneic TNP-coupled thymocytes and excess helper factors, the Ts remained inactive. In this condition the exposed popliteal lymph node cells routinely demonstrated approximately twice the CTL response developed by lymph node cells from normal mice. Nevertheless, when triggered in vitro by splenic antigen on either X-irradiated B or T cells, the exposed but not the normal lymph node cells exhibited reduced hapten-altered self-specific CTL responses. Furthermore, T cells within spleen cell-exposed popliteal lymph node cell populations when reexposed to splenic T cells made a factor that was found to be suppressive of CTL generation by normal lymph node cells in vitro. The nondialyzable T-cell suppressor factor (TsF) did not appear to act on lymph node precursor CTLs, nor on helper T cells but instead acted at the level of utilization of helper factors in the development of CTLs. In an examination of the effect of TsF on cellular replication, TsF was found to be nontoxic for CTLL-20, an IL-2-dependent T cell, and it did not hinder the uptake of IL-2 by receptor blockade of this cell. Nevertheless, the replication of CTLL-20 that is IL-2 driven was diminished in the presence of TsF. Similarly, TsF was found to be inhibitory for T-cell proliferation stimulated by mitogen but had no effect on a B myeloma cell proliferative response. Thus, TsF appears to act as an inhibitor of a T cell's capability to replicate despite the presence of the stimulus for replication, namely, IL-2.  相似文献   

11.
H-Y-specific and H-2Db-restricted, Lyt-1-2+ T-cell clones ( CTLL ) with graded specific cytotoxic activities on male C57BL/6 (B6) target cells ( 1E3 , ; 2C5 , ++; 2A5 , +, 3E6 , +/-) were tested for their capacity to inhibit the generation of H-Y-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) in vitro. Addition of irradiated lymphocytes of CTLL 1E3 and CTLL 3E6 but not those of CTLL 2A5 or CTLL 2C5 abolished the generation of CTL from in vivo primed H-Y-specific precursor cells (CTLP) when added to fresh mixed-lymphocyte cultures (MLC). Exogenous sources of T-cell growth factors (TCGF) did not overcome suppression. Rather the presence of TCGF resulted in a further enhancement of suppressive activities in CTLL 1E3 and 3E6 and the induction of similar activities in cells from CTLL 2A5 and 2C5 , which by themselves were not inhibitory. Moreover when added to similar MLC on Day 1 instead of Day 0, only irradiated cells of CTLL 3E6 but not those of the other three CTLL were suppressive. Induction of suppressive activities in H-Y-specific CTLL was independent of the appropriate male stimulator cells since it was also observed in MLC induced by irrelevant antigens (H-2, trinitrophenol). Furthermore at low cell numbers, irradiated lymphocytes from any of the CTLL consistently enhanced CTL activities generated from H-Y-specific CTLP. This augmenting activity, which was not TCGF, could be transferred by soluble mediators present in antigen-sensitized CTLL cultures. Thus, these data indicate (i) that cytotoxic effector cells can function as suppressor cells in the generation of CTL, (ii) that the cytotoxic activity of cloned CTL does not correlate with their capacity to suppress CTL responses, (iii) that the inhibition of CTL responses by CTLL is not due to simple consumption of T-cell growth factors produced in MLC, and (iv) that different CTL clones may interfere with the generation of CTL at different stages of their maturation. Moreover, the experiments suggest an antigen-independent enhancement of suppression by the interaction of CTL with lymphokines. Together with the augmenting activity evoked by cloned CTL the data provide strong evidence for the expression of multiple immunological functions by one particular subset of T cells and suggest that cytotoxic effector cells can differentially regulate the maturation and/or clonal expression of their precursor cells.  相似文献   

12.
High affinity antigen-specific T cells play a critical role during protective immune responses. Epitope enhancement can elicit more potent T cell responses and can subsequently lead to a stronger memory pool; however, the molecular basis of such enhancement is unclear. We used the consensus peptide-binding motif for the Major Histocompatibility Complex molecule H-2K(b) to design a heteroclitic version of the mouse hepatitis virus-specific subdominant S598 determinant. We demonstrate that a single amino acid substitution at a secondary anchor residue (Q to Y at position 3) increased the stability of the engineered determinant in complex with H-2K(b). The structural basis for this enhanced stability was associated with local alterations in the pMHC conformation as a result of the Q to Y substitution. Recombinant viruses encoding this engineered determinant primed CTL responses that also reacted to the wildtype epitope with significantly higher functional avidity, and protected against selection of virus mutated at a second CTL determinant and consequent disease progression in persistently infected mice. Collectively, our findings provide a basis for the enhanced immunogenicity of an engineered determinant that will serve as a template for guiding the development of heteroclitic T cell determinants with applications in prevention of CTL escape in chronic viral infections as well as in tumor immunity.  相似文献   

13.
Recent evidence has shown that cloned, murine CTL cell lines are resistant to the cytotoxic components of the toxic granules they release upon specific interaction with their target cells. Inasmuch as the resistance might be due to selection in culture over many months by repeated exposure to these cytolytic components (which are released repeatedly as a result of the cultured CTL being periodically stimulated by target cells), we asked whether primary CTL are also resistant. The primary CTL were elicited in vivo by i.p. injection of allogeneic tumor cells or in vitro by 5- to 6-day MLC or by 48-h exposure to the lectin Con A. The responding cells were separated into purified CD8+ (i.e., CD4-, CD8+) and purified CD4+ (i.e., CD4+, CD8-) T cell populations that were analyzed for cytolytic activity and for resistance to lysis by toxic secretory granules derived from cloned CTL cell lines. The CD8+ T cells were highly cytolytic and relatively resistant; they retained their cytolytic activity and were lysed to a minimal extent (0 to 10%) by quantities of isolated granules that lysed 80 to 90% of the P815 tumor cell line (tested as a representative standard cell line). The CD4+ T cells, in contrast, had only minimal cytolytic activity and were far more susceptible to granule-mediated lysis. Although the resistance of primary CD8+ T cells is impressive, it is not as pronounced as the resistance of the cloned CTL cell lines, indicating that during long-term culture there is some selection for increased resistance to granule-mediated lysis. In contrast to T cells (especially CD8+ T cells), Ia+ macrophages, isolated from primary immune peritoneal exudates, were highly susceptible to granule-mediated lysis.  相似文献   

14.
Cyclophosphamide and abrogation of tumor-induced suppressor T cell activity   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary Previously we have demonstrated that the in vitro generation of P815-specific anti-tumor cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) was suppressed by splenic suppressor T cells from late tumor-bearing hosts (TBH). Suppression is not caused by in vitro growth of P815 from splenic metastases, since suppression was also seen with spleen cells from late TBH mice bearing a hypoxanthine/aminopterin/thymidine-sensitive subline (PHS-5) of P815 in the presence of HAT. Cyclophosphamide has been shown to inhibit theinduction of suppressor cells selectively in a number of immune responses, but evidence that it can inhibit active tumor-induced suppressor T cells is limited. We have found that suppressor T cells already induced by P815 in syngeneic late TBH are sensitive to low doses of cyclophosphamide (50 mg/kg) given 1 day before spleen harvest, but the in vitro CTL response of late TBH spleen cells could not be restored by pretreating the mice with cyclophosphamide, even when exogenous interleukin-2 was added to the cultures. Although 50 mg/kg cyclophosphamide did not inhibit the CTL response of spleen cells from mice immunized with P815 +Corynebacterium parvum, the same dose of cyclophosphamide eliminated the CTL response of spleen cells from early TBH. Interleukin-2 (IL-2) did not overcome this effect of cyclophosphamide, suggesting a direct effect on CTL. Ultra-low-dose cyclophosphamide (10 mg/kg) did not adversely effect early TBH CTL but was still able to eliminate suppressor T cell activity from late TBH. Nevertheless, late TBH CTL remained unresponsive after pretreatment of mice with ultra-low-dose cyclophosphamide, even when exogenous IL-2 was added in vitro. CTL precursor frequency analyses demonstrated that cyclophosphamide pretreatment had little or no effect on the numbers of CTL precursors from early TBH. Late TBH CTL precursor cells were not detectable in these studies, with or without suppressor T cell inhibition by cyclophosphamide pretreatment. Thus, it appears that most CTL precursor cells may be lost or irretrievably inactivated in the spleens of late TBH mice.This work was supported by grants CA42443, CA48075 and T32-CA09210 from the National Cancer Institute, Department of Health and Human Services, and an American Cancer Society Clinical Oncology Career Development Award (H. D. Bear)  相似文献   

15.
We have recently shown that murine target cells can be sensitized for lysis by class I-restricted influenza virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) using noninfectious influenza virus. Sensitization is dependent on inactivation of viral neuraminidase activity (which can be achieved by heating virus); and requires fusion of viral and cellular membranes. In the present study, we have examined recognition of antigens derived from heat-treated virus by cloned CTL lines induced by immunization with infectious virus. Target cells sensitized with heat-treated virus were recognized by all 11 CTL clones that were specific for internal virion proteins (nucleoprotein and basic polymerase 1), and by one of six clones specific for the major viral glycoprotein (the hemagglutinin). Immunization of mice with heat-treated virus primed their splenocytes for secondary in vitro CTL responses. CTL generated in this manner recognized target cells infected with recombinant vaccinia virus expressing cloned influenza virus gene products. These findings indicate that both integral membrane proteins and internal proteins that comprise virions can be processed by antigen-presenting cells for recognition by class I-restricted CTL. It also appears that not all hemagglutinin determinants recognized on virus-infected cells are presented by cells sensitized with heat-treated virus.  相似文献   

16.
I have compared the requirements for T helper (Th) cell function during the generation of virus-specific and alloreactive cytotoxic thymus (T)-derived lymphocyte (CTL) responses. Restimulation of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)-immune T cells (VSV memory CTLs) with VSV-infected stimulators resulted in the generation of class I-restricted, VSV-specific CTLs. Progression of VSV memory CTLs (Lyt-1-2+) into VSV-specific CTLs required inductive signals derived from VSV-induced, Lyt-1+2- Th cells because: (i) cultures depleted by negative selection of Lyt-1+ T cells failed to generate CTLs; (ii) titration of VSV memory CTLs into a limiting dilution (LD) microculture system depleted of Th cells generated curves which were not consistent with a single limiting cell type; (iii) LD analysis of VSV memory CTLs did produce single-hit curves in the presence of Lyt-1+2- T cells sensitized against VSV; and (iv) monoclonal anti-L3T4 antibody completely abrogated CTL generation against VSV. Similar results were also obtained with Sendai virus (SV), a member of the paramyxovirus family. The notion that a class II-restricted, L3T4+ Th cell plays an obligatory role in the generation of CTLs against these viruses is also supported by the observation that purified T cell lymphoblasts (class II antigen negative) failed to function as antigen-presenting cells for CTL responses against VSV and SV. T cell lymphoblasts were efficiently lysed by class I-restricted, anti-VSV and -SV CTLs, indicating that activated T cells expressed the appropriate viral peptides for CTL recognition. Furthermore, heterogeneity in the VSV-induced Th cell population was detected by LD analysis, suggesting that at least two types of Th cells were required for the generation of an anti-VSV CTL response. VSV-induced Th cell function could not simply be replaced by exogenous IL-2 because this lymphokine induced cytotoxic cells that had the characteristics of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and not anti-viral CTLs. In contrast, CTL responses against allogeneic determinants could not be completely blocked with antibodies against L3T4 and depletion of L3T4+ cells did not prevent the generation of alloreactive CTLs in cultures stimulated with allogeneic spleen cells or activated T cell lymphoblasts. Thus, these studies demonstrate an obligatory requirement for an L3T4-dependent Th cell pathway for CTL responses against viruses such as VSV and SV; whereas, CTL responses against allogeneic determinants can utilize an L3T4-independent pathway.  相似文献   

17.
In an effort to study T cell functions in Lewis rats immunized with ABA-N-acetyl-L-tyrosine (ABA-tyr), we developed an antigen that provides a sensitive assay of ABA-specific helper function that is read as an increase in TNP-specific plaque-forming cells (PFC). This antigen has ABA coupled to AECM-Ficoll by virtue of a tripeptide (tyr-ala-ala) spacer and TNP coupled to the AECM side chains. At subimmunogenic doses, this antigen induced 400 anti-TNP PFC/10(6) spleen cells in ABA-tyr-immunized rats. As many as 8000 PFC/10(6) spleen cells were induced with larger doses of antigen (200 micrograms). By contrast, only 490 PFC/10(6) spleen cells could be induced with 1 mg of the conventional doubly haptenated protein carriers such as ABA-BSA-TNP. Both direct and indirect PFC were induced by this antigen in primed rats. The use of this antigen and passive transfer techniques to study ABA-specific helper activity revealed some differences from ABA-specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) and in vitro proliferation, which were studied previously. Cells responsible for helper activity appeared sooner after immunization and were found most prominently in peritoneal exudates but also significantly in spleen where the cells responsible for DTH or in vitro proliferative responses were never found. By contrast, helper cells were not seen in lymph nodes, where some proliferative activity could be found. Of these three ABA-specific T cell functions, helper activity was least easily suppressed by the previously used regimens of ABA-tyr in incomplete freunds adjuvant (IFA). Moreover, helper activity appears after injection of ABA-tyr in IFA, a method that has never in our hands yielded detectable DTH or in vitro proliferative responses. Despite these differences, phenotyping with monoclonal antibodies indicated that cells responsible for helper and proliferative activities were both W3/25+ and OX8-.  相似文献   

18.
Immunization of GAT non-responders with ABA-GAT leads to the activation of ABA-specific T cells. These hapten specific T cells are Lyt-1+2- helper cells capable of inducing anti-ABA antibody responses in vivo or B cell activation in vitro. However, their activation does not modify the GAT non-responder phenotype. Immunization of GAT responder mice with ABA-GAT activates GAT-specific T cells, which can help anti-ABA and anti-GAT antibody responses. Since the responder and non-responder strains used in these experiments differ only in the alleles present in the I region, the results suggest that the selective activation of hapten- or carrier-specific T cells is controlled by I region genes. Yet sensitization of the two strains with ABA-KLH or ABA-Tyr induces KLH-specific or ABA-specific T cells, respectively. This provides further evidence that the use of an immunogenic carrier prevents the expression of the hapten-specific T cell clones present in the repertoire of both responder and non-responder animals. Macrophages from responder animals pulsed with ABA-GAT can present ABA and GAT determinants to T cells. Thus, the absence of ABA-specific T cells in responders primed with ABA-GAT and their presence in GAT non-responders reflects a competition between hapten- and carrier-specific T cells and not an epitope selection by macrophages. We discuss the significance of the results in terms of Ir genes determining the self-plus-antigen-specific T cell repertoire rather than controlling antigen presentation by macrophages.  相似文献   

19.
H-2b class I-restricted, TNP-specific CTL clones were obtained by limiting dilution cloning of either short term polyclonal CTL lines or spleen cells of TNP-immunized mice directly ex vivo. Sequence analyses of mRNA coding for TCR alpha- and beta-chains of 11 clones derived from CTL lines from individual C57BL/6 mice revealed that all of them expressed unique but clearly nonrandom receptor structures. Five alpha-chains (45%) employed V alpha 10 gene elements, and four of those (36%) were associated with J beta 2.6-expressing beta-chains. The alpha-chains from these four TCR, moreover, contained an acidic amino acid in position 93 of their N or J region-determined sequences. Clones isolated directly from spleen cells carried these types of receptors at lower frequency, 27% V alpha 10 and 19% J beta 2.6, indicating that bulk in vitro cultivation on Ag leads to selection for these particular receptors. However, even in TNP-specific CTL cloned directly ex vivo, V alpha 10 usage was increased about fivefold over that in Ag-independently activated T cells in H-2b mice (4 to 5%). The selection for V alpha 10/J beta 2.6-expressing cells was obtained repeatedly in other TNP-specific CTL lines from C57BL/6 mice but not in FITC-specific CTL from the same strain or in TNP-specific CTL lines from B10.BR (H-2k) or B10.D2 (H-2d) mice. We conclude from this (a) that the selection for V alpha 10/J beta 2.6+ T cells is driven by the complementarity of these receptors to a combination of TNP and MHC epitopes and (b) that predominant receptor structures reflect the existence of a surprisingly limited number of "T cell-relevant" hapten determinants on the surface of covalently TNP-modified cells.  相似文献   

20.
The frequency of memory T cells in the spleens of mice primed with the A/Puerto Rico/8/34/1 (H1N1) (PR8) influenza A virus was determined using limiting dilution protocols. The mean frequency of memory cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) in spleen populations from mice primed with PR8 and restimulated in vitro with the same virus ranged, in six experiments, from 1 in 1600 to 1 in 4800. In the same experiments, the frequencies of CTL capable of lysing targets infected with the heterologous A/Hong Kong/×31/68 (H3N2) (HK) virus ranged from 1 in 1700 to 1 in 4700 nucleated spleen cells. Thus, at least 80% of PR8 (H1N1) influenza-specific cytotoxic T cells are lytic for both HK (H3N2)- and PR8-infected target cells. Further analysis of the specificity of a series of monoclonal influenza-specific CTL was achieved by expanding limit dilution cultures and then testing lytic capacity for targets infected with a range of influenza A viruses. This approach confirmed that the great majority of PR8-primed influenza-specific CTL are cross-reactive for a variety of influenza A subtypes. These experiments demonstrate the feasibility of quantitating different influenza-immune CTL specificities at a stage very close to removal of cells from the animal.  相似文献   

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