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1.
Two continuously growing nonmalignant B-cell lines specific for the hapten DNP have been used to study tolerance in developing B cells. These cell lines have previously been shown to consist of small cells without sIgM but with cytoplasmic mu chains, and mature sIgM- and sIgD-bearing cells. When the sIgM-negative cells are placed in culture, mature DNP-specific B cells begin to appear. The studies reported here have shown that when these cell lines were propagated in the presence of either 200 micrograms/ml or 1 mg/ml of the tolerogen DNP-MGG there was no inhibition of cell line growth as measured by thymidine incorporation, and no inhibition of receptor expression by maturing B cells. The cell line lymphocytes propagated in the presence of 200 micrograms/ml DNP-MGG for 7, 30, 45, or 60 days became tolerant and the tolerance persisted for at least 6 days after removal of DNP-MGG. However, tolerance was lost between 6 and 10 days after removal of DNP-MGG. Propagation of the cell lines for 30 days in either DNP-KLH or DNP-Ficoll produced the same results. Limiting dilution cultures of cell line lymphocytes made tolerant by growing them for 30 days in the presence of DNP-MGG demonstrated that there was a marked decrease in precursor frequency compared to controls. However, cell line lymphocytes made tolerant by a 48-hr incubation with DNP-MGG did not have a significant decrease in precursor frequency. These data suggest that tolerance induced by growing these cell lines in the presence of DNP-MGG is a valid in vitro model of tolerance in developing antigen-specific B cells. Tolerance induced in this model is consistent with the clonal anergy hypothesis, but requires the continued presence of DNP-MGG to maintain unresponsiveness. This suggests that clonal anergy can occur in B cells but may not be the sole mechanism of self tolerance for those antigens which are sequestered from the immune system.  相似文献   

2.
Studies of the effect of tolerance-inducing compounds on B lymphocytes have been complicated by the fact that it is technically difficult to completely isolate the antigen-specific B cell from the effects of T cells or T-cell factors. We have used our cell lines of nonmalignant dinitrophenyl (DNP)-specific B lymphocytes derived from normal mice, which have no contaminating T cells, to study the effect of DNP-murine IgG2a (DNP-MGG), a tolerogen which is not normally immunogenic, on antigen-specific B lymphocytes. Preincubation with DNP-MGG for 48 hr, both in the presence and absence of T-cell factors from EL-4 supernatant prior to adding the antigen DNP-Ficoll, can induce tolerance in cell line B lymphocytes. The suppression is antigen-specific since preincubation with fluorescein-MGG or unconjugated MGG does not suppress the anti-DNP response. At least a 36-hr incubation is required for tolerance induction in B lymphocytes, but a 6-hr preincubation with DNP-MGG augments the immune response to DNP-Ficoll. Lymphocytes incubated for 6 or 24 hr with DNP-MGG prior to adding EL-4 supernatant and filler cells without DNP-Ficoll exhibited an immune response equal to that elicited by DNP-Ficoll and T-cell factors. A 6-hr pulse with a DNP-conjugated polymer of D-glutamic acid and D-lysine (DNP-dGL), a B-cell tolerogen which does not bind to Fc receptors, elicited the same immune response as seen with a 6-hr pulse of DNP-MGG but a 48-hr preincubation with DNP-dGL induced tolerance. Thus, it is likely that the initial binding of the tolerogen to the immunoglobulin receptor on the mature B cell elicits an activation signal similar to that seen with the antigen. The suppressive effect of the tolerogen itself appears to occur at a later stage of the process of the B-cell activation, proliferation, and differentiation.  相似文献   

3.
Membrane depolarization is one of the earliest events in activation of cells by ligand receptor interaction. It is known that crosslinking of antigen-specific Ig receptors on B cells by antigen can induce membrane depolarization and subsequent Ia antigen expression on the cell surface. To determine whether a tolerance-inducing form of the antigen can also induce membrane depolarization after Ig receptor binding we used splenic B cells enriched for dinitrophenyl (DNP)-specific cells and determined relative membrane potential in these cells after binding of DNP-murine IgG2a (MGG) (tolerogen) or antigens (DNP-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) and DNP-Ficoll). Relative membrane potential was determined by loading the cells with the dye, 3.3-dipentyloxacarboxyanine (DiOC5(3)) after 2 hr incubation with ligand and determining relative fluorescence intensity on the fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS). Carriers alone did not depolarize these normal cell populations, but 100% of DNP-specific cells were depolarized by DNP-KLH and DNP-MGG while 85% were depolarized by DNP-Ficoll. To determine if tolerant B cells could be depolarized by antigen we induced tolerance in vitro or in vivo with DNP-MGG and measured the depolarization of DNP-specific B cells in response to antigens and tolerogen. DNP-specific B cells made tolerant by DNP-MGG underwent membrane depolarization when incubated with either DNP-KLH, DNP-MGG, or DNP-Ficoll but not with carriers alone. These data suggest that tolerogen induces membrane depolarization equally as well as antigen in normal cells. In addition, tolerant cells can be depolarized by Ig receptor crosslinking with either antigen or tolerogen. Thus, tolerance does not block the early membrane events induced by antigen in B cells.  相似文献   

4.
Calcium is an important factor in the immune response. Extracellular calcium is required for antibody production by B lymphocytes. Several investigators have demonstrated that crosslinking of receptors on B lymphocytes by anti-mu antibody induces an increase in intracellular calcium. There are few data on the role of intracellular calcium mobilization or calcium influx in tolerance induction in B cells. We studied changes in free intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca+2]i) induced by exposure of dinitrophenyl (DNP)-specific B cells to the tolerance-inducing conjugate DNP-murine IgG2a (DNP-MGG). Splenic B cells enriched for DNP-specific cells and DNP-specific continuous B-cell lines were used for the studies. Exposure of B cells to the tolerogen DNP-MGG, the antigen DNP-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (DNP-KLH), or the antigen DNP-Ficoll induced an increase in free [Ca+2]i which was due to both mobilization of Ca+2 from endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and influx of extracellular Ca+2. This increase was DNP specific since no significant change was seen with carriers alone and no change was seen in cells that were not DNP specific. The DNP-MGG and DNP-Ficoll induced the same amount of Ca+2 release from ER but the release induced by DNP-KLH was higher. When B cells, which were made tolerant by in vitro incubation with DNP-MGG, were incubated with antigens, a mobilization of Ca+2 from endoplasmic reticulum occurred that was the same as that of nontolerant B cells. Since Ca+2 mobilization is associated with Ig receptor-dependent early B-cell activation, it is likely that the tolerant B cell can still receive an activation signal through the Ig receptors.  相似文献   

5.
B cell anergy represents an important mechanism of peripheral immunological tolerance for mature autoreactive B cells that escape central tolerance enforced by receptor editing and clonal deletion. Although well documented in mice, the extent of its participation in human B cell tolerance remains to be fully established. In this study, we characterize the functional behavior of strictly defined human naive B cells separated on the basis of their surface IgM (sIgM) expression levels. We demonstrate that cells with lower sIgM levels (IgM(lo)) are impaired in their ability to flux calcium in response to either anti-IgM or anti-IgD cross-linking and contain a significantly increased frequency of autoreactive cells compared with naive B cells with higher levels of sIgM. Phenotypically, in healthy subjects, IgM(lo) cells are characterized by the absence of activation markers, reduction of costimulatory molecules (CD19 and CD21), and increased levels of inhibitory CD22. Functionally, IgM(lo) cells display significantly weaker proliferation, impaired differentiation, and poor Ab production. In aggregate, the data indicate that hyporesponsiveness to BCR cross-linking associated with sIgM downregulation is present in a much larger fraction of all human naive B cells than previously reported and is likely to reflect a state of anergy induced by chronic autoantigen stimulation. Finally, our results indicate that in systemic lupus erythematosus patients, naive IgM(lo) cells display increased levels of CD95 and decreased levels of CD22, a phenotype consistent with enhanced activation of autoreactive naive B cells in this autoimmune disease.  相似文献   

6.
2,4-Dinitrophenyl (DNP) coupled to the copolymer D-glutamic acid and D-lysine (D-GL) induces B cell tolerance but not T cell tolerance. This implies either a lack of DNP determinant recognition by T cells or a substantial difference in tolerance mechanisms for the two cell types. In the present study D-GL was conjugated with the well-defined determinant azobenzenearsonate (ABA) coupled to single amino acids shown here and previously by others to trigger effectively T lymphocytes. The experiments presented here demonstrate that these ABA conjugates of D-GL, although capable of diminishing anti-ABA antibody production, completely fail to render ABA-specific T lymphocytes tolerant thus drawing us to conclude that there are significant operational differences in the mechanisms of tolerance induction in T and B lymphocytes, respectively.  相似文献   

7.
Crosslinking of sIgM on the B cell line WEHI 231 with anti-sIgM antibody induces protein tyrosine phosphorylation, implicating protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) in sIg-mediated signal transduction. We have analyzed this cell line for members of the src family of PTKs and have evaluated whether these PTKs might be involved in the process of sIgM-mediated signaling. Our results show that Blk, Lyn, Lck, and Hck are detectable in WEHI 231 cells. Addition of antibodies to sIgM were found to variably stimulate the activities of Blk, Lyn, Lck, and Hck as measured by immune-complex protein kinase assays. Autophosphorylation of these src PTKs, as assessed by reaction with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies, increased over the time course of sIgM-mediated activation. Co-immunoprecipitation studies to investigate the potential physical interaction of src PTKs with the sIgM receptor complex revealed that, under digitonin and Brij 96 lysis conditions Lyn, Lck, Hck, but not Blk associated with sIgM.  相似文献   

8.
Little is known about the role of signals transduced by cell surface IgM (sIgM) expressed during early B cell development. A subclone (1.6) of the late pre-B cell lymphoma 70Z/3.12 was used to study signal transduction by surface mu heavy (H) chain before and after transition to the early immature B cell stage, and the functional consequences thereof. Although kappa L chain expression can be induced on 1.6 cells by LPS or cytokines, immunoprecipitations indicated that the non-induced 1.6 cells expressed mu H chain with an alternative protein(s) which may be a surrogate light chain(s). Consistent with this, anti-mu but not anti-kappa or anti-lambda antibodies caused transient Ca2+ mobilization in noninduced 1.6 cells. The Ca2+ signal was derived from both intracellular stores and Ca2+ influx in either noninduced cells or in cells that had been preinduced to express kappa L chain. Thus, the ability of mu H chain to mobilize Ca2+ as a second messenger does not depend upon the expression of mature L chains. The immature B lymphomas, WEHI-231 and CH1, express mature forms of IgM and undergo growth arrest when stimulated by anti-mu antibody. In contrast, signals generated by mu H chain on either noninduced or preinduced 1.6 cells or in the sIgM+ pre-B cell transfectant 300-19 mu lambda 36/8 did not cause growth arrest. These results suggest that mu H chain expressed on pre-B cells is capable of mobilizing Ca2+, but that this signal alone is insufficient to induce growth arrest in the pre-B cell.  相似文献   

9.
Although immature/transitional peripheral B cells may remain susceptible to selection pressures before full maturation, the nature and timing of these selection events remain unclear. We show that correlated expression of surface (s) IgM (sIgM), CD23, and AA4 defines three nonproliferative subpopulations of immature/transitional peripheral B cells. We designate these populations transitional (T) 1 (AA4(+)CD23(-)sIgM(high)), T2 (AA4(+)CD23(+)sIgM(high)), and T3 (AA4(+)CD23(+)sIgM(low)). Cells within all three subsets are functionally immature as judged by their failure to proliferate following sIgM cross-linking in vitro, and their rapid rate of turnover in vivo as assessed by 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine labeling. These labeling studies also reveal measurable cell loss at both the T1-T2 and T2-T3 transitions, suggesting the existence of multiple selection points within the peripheral immature B cell pool. Furthermore, we find that Btk-deficient (xid) mice exhibit an incomplete developmental block at the T2-T3 transition within the immature B cell pool. This contrasts markedly with lyn(-/-) mice, which exhibit depressed numbers but normal ratios of each immature peripheral B cell subset and severely reduced numbers of mature B cells. Together, these data provide evidence for multiple selection points among immature peripheral B cells, suggesting that the B cell repertoire is shaped by multiple unique selection events that occur within the immature/transitional peripheral B cell pool.  相似文献   

10.
Our laboratory has established that 2,4-dinitrophenyl-conjugated mouse IgG (DNP-MGG) can specifically suppress proliferation, antibody synthesis, and secretion in vivo in two anti-DNP secreting cell lines: hybridoma 35-12 and myeloma MOPC-315. In the present study an in vitro system was used to further analyze the mechanism of suppression of hybridoma 35-12 cells (HC) by DNP-MGG. It was found that DNP-MGG-induced suppression of HC requires macrophages (M phi) and occurs only in eclipsed HC which are mainly small, nonsecreting cells. The M phi-mediated suppression is DNP specific, requires no M phi-HC cell contact, and does not involve killing of eclipsed HC. M phi culture supernatant alone cannot mediate suppression, but supernatants obtained by culturing M phi with either HC or supernatant from HC culture can mediate suppression of eclipsed HC in the presence of DNP-MGG. DNP-MGG is not required for the generation of effective M phi factors, but it is required for suppression of HC in the presence of M phi factors. Indomethacin cannot reverse M phi-mediated suppression, suggesting prostaglandins may not be the M phi factors. These data suggest that M phi-derived factors which are not prostaglandins in nature may play a role in B-cell regulation and in B-cell suppression induced by tolerogenic forms of antigen.  相似文献   

11.
A procedure that generates an enriched population (60 to 85%) of memory B cells specific for TNP (TNP-MABC) was employed. The activation requirements of TNP-MABC for the T-dependent antigen TNP-KLH and carrier-primed helper T (Th) cells were compared to those for TNP-binding cells from nonimmune mice (TNP-ABC). Proliferation and differentiation of TNP-MABC in response to cognate recognition of antigen requires less antigen and fewer carrier-primed Th cells than the activation of TNP-ABC. Furthermore, responses of the TNP-MABC were of a greater magnitude. Non-cognate activation induces a low level of proliferation of both TNP-ABC and TNP-MABC, but induces differentiation of TNP-MABC only. Percoll density fractionation of spleen cells prior to enrichment for TNP-MABC suggests that the small, dense cell population responds to cognate, but not to non-cognate activation. FACS separation of TNP-MABC by surface Ig isotype reveals that approximately 80% of the secondary IgG response is derived from cells expressing sIgG. Such cells constitute less than 10% of the total number of TNP-MABC. Limiting dilution studies with sorted TNP-MABC indicate that sIgG+ TNP-MABC are enriched for precursors that give rise to a large clone size. The in vitro results indicate the existence of three putative pathways for antigen-specific memory B cell activation by a T-dependent antigen: 1) sIgG+ cells differentiating into IgG-secreting cells; 2) sIgM+ cells differentiating into IgG-secreting cells; and 3) sIgM+ cells differentiating into IgM-secreting cells.  相似文献   

12.
13.
B cells leave the bone marrow as transitional B cells. Transitional B cells represent a target of negative selection and peripheral tolerance, both of which are abrogated in vitro by mediators of T cell help. In vitro, transitional and mature B cells differ in their responses to B cell receptor ligation. Whereas mature B cells up-regulate the T cell costimulatory molecule CD86 (B7.2) and are activated, transitional B cells do not and undergo apoptosis. The ability of transitional B cells to process and present Ag to CD4 T cells and to elicit protective signals in the absence of CD86 up-regulation was investigated. We report that transitional B cells can process and present Ag as peptide:MHC class II complexes. However, their ability to activate T cells and elicit help signals from CD4-expressing Th cells was compromised compared with mature B cells, unless exogenous T cell costimulation was provided. A stringent requirement for CD28 costimulation was not evident in interactions between transitional B cells and preactivated CD4-expressing T cells, indicating that T cells involved in vivo in an ongoing immune response might rescue Ag-specific transitional B cells from negative selection. These data suggest that during an immune response, immature B cells may be able to sustain the responses of preactivated CD4(+) T cells, while being unable to initiate activation of naive T cells. Furthermore, the ability of preactivated, but not naive T cells to provide survival signals to B cell receptor-engaged transitional immature B cells argues that these B cells may be directed toward activation rather than negative selection when encountering Ag in the context of a pre-existing immune response.  相似文献   

14.
As with agents capable of causing the release of IL 1, IL 1 itself is capable of modulating certain tolerance-inducing events. Under the condition used in the present study, it previously has been firmly established that injection of A/J mice with DHGG induces a state of antigen-specific tolerance in both T helper (Th) and B cells. The tolerance in the B cell is of long duration, whereas that in the B cell is of shorter duration. Recombinant IL 1 (rIL 1) given shortly after the tolerogen DHGG results in the inhibition of the induction of tolerance resulting in antibody production. The induction of tolerance is inhibited at both its antigen-specific Th cell and B cell levels, although the latter may be caused by the former. The inhibition of the induction of tolerance by rIL 1 is not correlated to the generation of antigen-specific T suppressor cells. IL 1 mimics lipopolysaccharide and 8-bromoguanosine, which generate IL 1 production, in its ability to interfere with the in vivo induction of tolerance. However, in contrast to these latter mitogens which cause both terminal differentiation of B cells and IL 1 production, IL 1 itself does not cause in vivo circumvention of long-term tolerant Th cells in the presence of competent B cells and antigen. These latter findings suggest that a signal(s) in addition to those delivered by IL 1 is required for activation of the B cell compartment recovering from tolerance to antibody production. AHGG (immunogen) is a potent generator of IL 1 release, whereas DHGG has no effect on IL 1 release from macrophages and AHGG inhibits the induction of tolerance by DHGG. These latter results suggest that the lack of an IL 1 signal may be responsible for the deliverance of a tolerogenic rather than an immunogenic signal to the Th cell.  相似文献   

15.
CD5 is a key regulator of Ag receptor-mediated activation, selection, and differentiation in both T and B cells. Accumulating evidence indicates that lymphocyte activation and selection are sensitive to variations in levels of CD5 on the cell surface. We now show that CD5 expression on the surface of B and T cells is regulated posttranslationally by direct interaction with the mu(2) subunit of the AP2 adaptor complex that links transmembrane proteins to clathrin-coated pits. CD5 is rapidly internalized from the cell surface in lymphoid cell lines, mature splenic T and B cells, and peritoneal CD5(+) B cells following monovalent or bivalent ligation of the receptor. We mapped the mu(2) subunit binding site on CD5 to Y(429) and determined that the integrity of this site was necessary for CD5 internalization. Cross-linking of the Ag receptor with intact Abs inhibited CD5 internalization in B cells, but had the opposite effect in T cells. However, if F(ab')(2) Abs were used to stimulate the Ag receptor in B cells, the effect on CD5 internalization was now similar to that observed in T cells, indicating that signals through the Ag receptor and FcR regulate CD5 endocytosis in B cells. This was confirmed using an FcgammaRIIB1-deficient B cell line. The ability to differentially alter posttranslational CD5 expression in T and B cells is likely to be key in regulation of Ag receptor signaling and generation of tolerance in T and B lymphocytes.  相似文献   

16.
Mature and immature B cells differ in their responses to antigen receptor crosslinking. Whereas mature B cells enter cell cycle in response to such stimulation, immature B cells exhibit proliferative unresponsiveness and undergo induced tolerance following surface immunoglobulin (sIg) engagement. Previous studies evaluating antigen receptor-mediated negative signaling have utilized intact goat anti-immunoglobulin (anti-Ig) antibodies as polyclonal ligands based upon observations that the Fc portion of these reagents does not interact with and mediate negative signaling through the FcR on mature B cells. Thus, the negative effects of goat anti-Ig on immature B cells have been attributed solely to signals mediated via their antigen receptors. In the studies reported here we show that the activation unresponsiveness inherent to immature B cells is FcR independent. However, we also show that immature B cells are sensitive to FcR-mediated inhibition and that these effects can be mediated by intact goat antibodies at concentrations that promote positive activation signals in mature B cells. Our results demonstrate that inhibition of immature B cell LPS responses by anti-Ig antibodies, used in previous studies as an in vitro model for B cell tolerance induction, is an FcR-mediated phenomenon. We show that developmentally associated anti-Ig-mediated inhibition of LPS requires the use of intact antibodies, and that this inhibition can be blocked by the anti-FcR monoclonal antibody 2.4G2. Flow cytometric analysis of FcR-positive B cells indicates that both mature and immature B cells express equivalent levels of FcR gamma. Therefore, the sensitivity of immature, but not mature, cells to intact goat anti-mu antibodies suggests that either FcRs or their associated inhibitory pathways change during B cell development.  相似文献   

17.
During the course of B lymphocyte development, newly emerging surface Ig+ B cells pass through a stage when Ag-Ag receptor interactions lead not to immune responsiveness but to a state of functional tolerance. We have explored the molecular basis of antigenic nonresponsiveness and tolerance susceptibility using tolerance-susceptible surface Ig+ splenic B lymphocytes from neonatal mice and anti-mu chain antibodies as a polyclonal ligand. In this population of cells, surface IgM is uncoupled from the inositol phospholipid (PI)-hydrolysis pathway at a point proximal to the receptor; anti-mu antibodies did not stimulate inositol phosphate generation despite the fact that PI-hydrolysis was observed after treatment with A1F4, implicating the existence of a functional G protein and phospholipase C. Further evidence for a difference early in the signal transduction pathway stems from the finding that anti-mu stimulation does not induce the expression of two immediate/early PKC-linked genes egr-1 and c-fos. This appears to be the primary signaling difference between the mature and immature B cells from the neonatal mouse splenic population, as these cells undergo a G0-G1 cell cycle phase transition when surface IgM is bypassed using phorbol diester and calcium ionophore. Interestingly, despite undetectable levels of PI-hydrolysis, we observed equivalent receptor-mediated changes in intracellular calcium when comparing the immature and mature populations. These results indicate incomplete coupling of surface IgM to the signal transduction machinery operative in mature, immunocompetent B cells and suggests a molecular mechanism accounting for the differential processing of surface IgM signals into activation vs tolerogenic responses observed in these two stages of B cell development.  相似文献   

18.
In vitro regulation of IgA subclass synthesis was investigated in pokeweed mitogen (PWM)-stimulated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes. In past experiments we have demonstrated that 50% of the IgA plasma cells derived from PWM-stimulated cultures are positive for IgA1 and 50% are positive for IgA2. This observation is surprising because approximately 80% of the IgA B cells in the peripheral circulation bear IgA1 and 20% bear IgA2. To determine if the shift toward IgA2 predominance in PWM-stimulated cultures might be due to an enriched source for IgA2 plasma cells from a precursor pool of immature B cells, we used panning techniques to separate immature precursors that express surface IgM (sIgM+) from mature precursors that no longer express IgM (sIgM-). These separated B cells were cultured with equal numbers of T cells and PWM for 7 days. In all 10 experiments there was an enrichment for IgA2 in the sIgM+ cultures; 55 +/- 9.6% of the total IgA plasma cells were positive for IgA2 in the sIgM+ cultures vs 38 +/- 6.3% in the sIgM- cultures (p less than 0.001). These results indicate that both sIgM+ and sIgM- cells can give rise to IgA plasma cells in PWM-stimulated cultures and that there is an enrichment for IgA2 precursors in the sIgM+ population. Other possible regulatory mechanisms were also investigated. To determine if there was isotype switching from IgA1 to IgA2, monoclonal anti-IgA1 antibodies were added to PWM cultures. These antibodies resulted in a mean suppression of IgA1 plasma cell production of 82% with a concomitant 45% suppression of total IgA but only 4.6% suppression of IgA2. These results make it unlikely that IgA2 plasma cells in PWM-stimulated cultures are derived from cells that initially produced IgA1. To investigate the possibility that one IgA subclass might be more T cell dependent than the other, T and B cells were separated and B cells were reconstituted with T cells in ratios that varied from 1:10 to 10:1 or with irradiated T cells. These procedures did not alter the proportion of IgA plasma cells positive for IgA1 or IgA2, indicating that the two subclasses do not differ in their response to T cell signals in PWM-stimulated cultures.  相似文献   

19.
Various mechanisms of peripheral T cell tolerization have evolved to avoid responses mediated by autoreactive T cells that have not been eliminated in the thymus. In this study, we investigated the peripheral conditions of Ag presentation required to induce T cell tolerance when the predominant APCs are B cells. We show that transient Ag presentation, in absence of inflammation and in a self-context, induces CD4(+) T cell activation and memory formation. In contrast, chronic Ag presentation leads to CD4(+) T cell tolerance. The importance of long-lasting Ag presentation in inducing tolerance was also confirmed in the herpes stromal keratitis autoimmune disease model. Keratogenic T cells could be activated or tolerized depending on the APC short or long persistence. Thus, when APCs are B cells, the persistence of the Ag presentation itself is one of the main conditions to have peripheral T cell tolerance.  相似文献   

20.
A diabetogenic gene prevents T cells from receiving costimulatory signals.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
T cell fate following antigen encounter is determined by several intracellular signals generated by the interaction of the T cell with an antigen-presenting cell. In the periphery activation requires T cell receptor signaling (signal one) in combination with costimulatory signals (signal two), usually provided through the cognate interaction of CD28 and B7 molecules. Provision of signal one alone to purified murine peripheral T cells in vitro induces apoptosis or anergy rather than promoting activation. These T cells can be rescued from apoptosis if they are provided with costimulation supplied, for example, by engaging the CD28 co-receptor with an anti-CD28 monoclonal antibody or by adding an exogenous source of interleukin-2. However, a majority of peripheral T cells from autoimmune, diabetes-prone Biobreeding (BB) rats exhibited different responses to these stimuli. T cells from these rats could not be rescued from apoptosis by costimulation. This was not due to the inability of BB-DP T cells to upregulate CD28 and the IL-2 receptor in response to TCR crosslinking. The failure of these costimulatory interactions to rescue BB-DP T cells segregated with the diabetes-susceptibility gene iddm1. Iddm1 in the rat causes peripheral T cell lymphopenia, which is associated with a dramatically shortened peripheral T cell life span. Our results indicate that a diabetogenic gene may contribute to autoimmunity by negating costimulatory signals important for the survival of long-lived peripheral T cells.  相似文献   

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