首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Induction of peripheral T cell anergy associated with stimulation through the TCR complex in vivo has been described in mice using chemically modified APC, staphylococcal enterotoxin B, and intact anti-CD3 mAb. In the latter two models, T cell proliferation, IL-2R expression, and lymphokine production have been demonstrated before subsequent induction of hyporesponsiveness, whereas in the former model, these events have not been observed. To further investigate the relationship between mitogenicity and induction of peripheral hyporesponsiveness, mice were treated with either mitogenic intact anti-CD3 mAb or nonmitogenic F(ab')2 fragments of anti-CD3 mAb. T cells from F(ab')2-treated mice demonstrated a selective decrease in helper functions, with minimal effect on CTL function. Specifically, a marked reduction in ability of Th cells to secrete IL-2 when challenged in vitro with mitogen or alloantigen was observed, which persisted for at least 2 mo after mAb administration and which was independent of T cell depletion. Proliferative function was decreased in CD4+ T cells and could not be fully restored with addition of exogenous IL-2. A helper defect was also evident in vivo, in that F(ab')2-treated mice were deficient in their ability to reject MHC-disparate skin grafts, and in vivo administration of IL-2 reconstituted their ability to reject skin grafts normally. In contrast, T cells from mice treated with intact mAb demonstrated a significant decrease in both CTL and helper functions. A long term reduction in TCR expression on CD4+ cells from F(ab')2-treated mice, and on both CD4+ and CD8+ cells from intact mAb-treated mice was observed. These findings demonstrate that peripheral T cell hyporesponsiveness can be induced in vivo by binding an identical epitope on the TCR complex in the presence or absence of initial proliferation, lymphokine secretion, or IL-2R expression, and that binding to the same epitope can result in varying long term effects on T cell function.  相似文献   

2.
MLR in various combinations with class I H-2 disparity revealed that there are three patterns of MLR in the aspect of responding T subset (CD4 vs CD8) dominance. Irrespective of the CD8 vs CD4 dominance, a single i.v. administration of class I-disparate allogeneic spleen cells resulted in almost complete abrogation of anti-class I proliferative capacity of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in six combinations. The suppression of proliferative responses was correlated with the striking reduction in the ability to produce IL-2 upon stimulation with the relevant class I alloantigens. In contrast, i.v. presensitized recipient mice exhibiting only marginal MLR/Il-2 production could generate comparable magnitudes of anti-allo class I CTL as well as graft rejection responses to those induced by normal unpresensitized mice. The administration in vivo of anti-CD4 antibody along with the i.v. presensitization not only suppressed the generation of CTL responses by spleen cells but also induced appreciable prolongation of allo-class I-disparate skin grafts under conditions in which neither alone did it. These results demonstrate that 1) the suppression of graft rejection responses is not necessarily reflected on the reduction of MLR; 2) CD8+ CTL precursors responsible for graft rejection can be activated by either allo-class I-reactive CD8+ or CD4+ Th cells; 3) i.v. presensitization induces functional elimination of CD8+ and CD4+ proliferative/IL-2-producing T cells but not of CD8+ CTL precursors and CD4+ Th whose capacity is expressed by assistance of CTL induction but not by their own proliferation. Thus, this study illustrates the heterogeneity of class I alloantigen-reactive CD4+ T cells in the aspect of their capacity to proliferate themselves vs contribute to CTL induction as well as graft rejection.  相似文献   

3.
Previous work from this laboratory demonstrated that tolerance to MHC-identical or class I-disparate renal allografts develops in approximately one third of miniature swine without exogenous immunosuppression. A back-cross study indicated that rejection of MHC-identical transplants due to minor Ag was controlled by one or possibly two non-MHC-linked, autosomal dominant Ir genes. According to this hypothesis, and assuming complete penetrance, graft acceptors would be homozygous recessive at the relevant Ir loci, as would their offspring. Alternatively, if the gene(s) were incompletely penetrant, then two acceptors could give rise to a rejector. However, a high rate of MHC-identical graft acceptance would still be expected in the offspring of acceptors even if the Ir gene(s) were incompletely penetrant. To test this hypothesis and to obtain a higher frequency of acceptor animals for studies of tolerance, a program of selective breeding of renal allograft acceptors was begun. In the present paper, we assess the effect of selective breeding on renal graft acceptance. The analysis indicates a marked increase in the rate of MHC-identical graft acceptance, from 27.3% (n = 24) for the earliest of the four chronologic subgroups assessed to 64.5% (n = 33) for the most recent subgroup (p less than 0.0001). Calculations of kinship revealed that the increased acceptance of MHC-identical grafts was not the result of differences between acceptors and rejectors in donor/recipient consanguinity. Class I-disparate grafts (n = 128) were similarly stratified chronologically and compared. Unlike MHC-identical grafts, the rate of acceptance of class I-disparate grafts has not changed over time. We conclude that rejector/acceptor status with respect to class I MHC incompatibility is determined by genetic factors in addition to those that control responses to minor antigen incompatibilities only.  相似文献   

4.
Anergic T cells inhibit the antigen-presenting function of dendritic cells   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The phenomena of infectious tolerance and linked-suppression are well established, but the mechanisms involved are incompletely defined. Anergic T cells can inhibit responsive T cells in vitro and prolong skin allograft survival in vivo. In this study the mechanisms underlying these events were explored. Allospecific mouse T cell clones rendered unresponsive in vitro inhibited proliferation by responsive T cells specific for the same alloantigens. The inhibition required the presence of APC, in that the response to coimmobilized anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 Abs was not inhibited. Coculture of anergic T cells with bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (DC) led to profound inhibition of the ability of the DC to stimulate T cells with the same or a different specificity. After coculture with anergic T cells expression of MHC class II, CD80 and CD86 by DC were down-regulated. These effects did not appear to be due to a soluble factor in that inhibition was not seen in Transwell experiments, and was not reversed by addition of neutralizing anti-IL-4, anti-IL-10, and anti-TGF-beta Abs. Taken together, these data suggest that anergic T cells function as suppressor cells by inhibiting Ag presentation by DC via a cell contact-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Concomitant administration of cyclosporin A (CsA) with Ag has been shown to augment the production of Ag-specific IgE in vivo. We demonstrate that addition of CsA also markedly potentiated Ag-specific IgE in vitro. Low doses of CsA (3 and 10 ng/ml) added at the time of culture initiation selectively enhanced Ag-specific IgE but not IgA or IgG1 production, whereas higher doses (30 ng/ml) suppressed production of all the isotypes. Augmented IgE production was found to correlate with enhanced production of IL-4 and diminished production of IFN-gamma. Delayed addition (after 2 days) of low doses of CsA to Ag-stimulated cultures did not potentiate IgE production, even though CsA differentially affected levels of IL-4 and IFN-gamma. CsA enhanced Ag-mediated cognate T/B interaction was not affected by neutralizing doses of anti-IL-4, suggesting Ag-mediated lymphocytic "synapses" may be inaccessible to anti-IL-4. The effect of CsA on Ag presentation was determined by pulsing peritoneal exudate cells, spleen cells, or primed B cells with Ag and low doses of CsA before incubation with primed splenocytes. Enhanced Ag-specific IgE responses were detected with no effect on IL-4 or IFN-gamma levels. Thus, our study indicates that CsA potentiation of Ag-specific IgE response is due to cumulative action of CsA on two independent pathways: first, CsA differentially modulates IL-4 and IFN-gamma levels during the early phase of cognate Th2/B cell interaction; and second, CsA directly affects APC and IgE isotype-specific amplifying cellular components without apparently affecting the secretory levels of IL-4 and IFN-gamma. Dual mechanisms of CsA-potentiated IgE production are consistent with the hypothesis of two-tiered T cell regulation of Ag-specific IgE responses.  相似文献   

6.
Cyclosporin A (CsA) is a widely used agent for the prevention of tissue allograft rejection in human transplantation. As a result of the recent demonstration that the allospecific Th cell response of human PBL can be generated by three distinct pathways of Th cell and APC interactions, we investigated the sensitivity of these three Th-APC pathways, as well as the Th response to recall Ag, to different concentrations of CsA. PBL from healthy volunteer donors were set up as primary in vitro cultures either without antigenic stimulation, or with influenza A virus, tetanus toxoid, or HLA alloantigenic (ALLO) stimulation. Ag-stimulated IL-2 production and proliferation were measured to assess Th cell function. To study the effect of CsA on Th function, different concentrations of CsA (0.001 to 0.1 micrograms/ml final) were added to the cultures at the time of stimulation. Th responses to influenza A virus and tetanus toxoid were more sensitive to CsA than the Th response to ALLO. By selective depletion of either responder or stimulator APC and/or of CD4+ or CD8+ cells, we 1) verified that the human ALLO Th response can be mediated by three distinct Th-APC pathways; 2) demonstrated that the ALLO response mediated by CD4+ Th and self-APC (the same helper pathway used by recall Ag) is as sensitive to CsA as the responses to recall Ag; and 3) showed that there is a hierarchy of sensitivity of these three allospecific pathways. The results are discussed with respect to the potential significance of the differential sensitivity of these allospecific Th-APC pathways to CsA for prevention of tissue allograft rejection.  相似文献   

7.
MRC OX35, an anti-CD4 mAb, was used to treat high responder Wistar Furth (W/F) (RT1u) and low responder DA (RT1a) rats which had been grafted with directly vascularized hearts from PVG (RT1c) rats across a full MHC plus non-MHC incompatibility. Four doses of mAb at 7 mg/kg given in the first 2 wk postgrafting induced indefinite graft survival (greater than 150 days) in DA hosts, but only delayed rejection to 18 to 42 days in W/F as compared to rejection times of 6 to 8 days in untreated rats. The extension of MRC OX35 treatment to 6 wk in W/F rats induced indefinite graft survival in three of six rats. During treatment MRC OX35 therapy only partially depleted CD4+ cells, and all circulating CD4+ cells were coated with MRC OX35. The capacity of naive CD4+ and CD8+ cells from W/F and DA to be activated to PVG alloantigen was compared both in vitro in an MLC assay and in vivo by an adoptive transfer assay of their capacity to restore rejection of PVG heart grafts in irradiated syngeneic hosts. CD4+ cells from both W/F and DA proliferated in MLC and restored graft rejection. W/F CD8+ cells both proliferated in MLC and restored rejection, but DA CD8+ cells neither proliferated nor reconstituted rejection. Examination of lymphocytes from MRC OX35 treated hosts with long-surviving grafts showed that they were neither depleted of CD4+ T cells nor did they lack the capacity to proliferate to PVG Ag in MLC, this response being similar to that to third-party Ag or by naive lymphocytes. Compared to first-set rejection, PVG skin graft rejection was delayed 2 to 3 days in W/F and 10 to 12 days in DA rats with long-surviving grafts after MRC OX35 therapy, whereas they rejected third-party skin grafts in first-set tempo. These studies show that differences in graft survival in anti-CD4 treated low and high responder strains may be due to the inherent capacity of CD8+ cells to be activated to effect rejection independent of CD4+ cells in W/F but not in DA. In those hosts that accept grafts, there is no evidence of clonal deletion, but there appears to be a form of unresponsiveness akin to that induced in adult rats by other immunosuppressive therapies that protects the graft from rejection.  相似文献   

8.
Transplantation tolerance can be induced in mice by grafting under the cover of nondepleting CD4 plus CD8 or CD154 mAbs. This tolerance is donor Ag specific and depends on a population of CD4(+) regulatory T cells that, as yet, remain poorly defined in terms of their specificity, origin, and phenotype. Blocking of the Ag-specific response in vitro with an anti-CD4 mAb allowed T cells from monospecific female TCR-transgenic mice against the male Ag Dby, presented by H-2E(k), to express high levels of foxP3 mRNA. foxP3 induction was dependent on TGF-beta. The nondepleting anti-CD4 mAb was also able to induce tolerance in vivo in such monospecific TCR-transgenic mice, and this too was dependent on TGF-beta. As in conventional mice, acquired tolerance was dominant, such that naive monospecific T cells were not able to override tolerance. Splenic T cells from tolerant mice proliferated normally in response to Ag, and secreted IFN-gamma and some IL-4, similar to control mice undergoing primary or secondary graft rejection. High levels of foxP3 mRNA, and glucocorticoid-induced TNFR superfamily member 18 (GITR)(+) CD25(+) T cells were found within the tolerated skin grafts of long-term tolerant recipients. These data suggest that regulatory T cells maintaining transplantation tolerance after CD4 Ab blockade can be induced de novo through a TGF-beta-dependent mechanism, and come to accumulate in tolerated grafts.  相似文献   

9.
Posttransplant infusion of donor bone marrow cells (BMC) induces tolerance to allografts in adult mice, dogs, nonhuman primates, and probably humans. Here we used a mouse skin allograft model and an allogeneic radiation chimera model to examine the role of MHC Ags in tolerance induction. Infusion of MHC class II Ag-deficient (CIID) BMC failed to prolong C57BL/6 (B6) skin grafts in ALS- and rapamycin-treated B10.A mice, whereas wild-type B6 or MHC class I Ag-deficient BMC induced prolongation. Removal of class II Ag-bearing cells from donor BMC markedly reduced the tolerogenic effect compared with untreated BMC, although graft survival was significantly longer in mice given depleted BMC than that in control mice given no BMC. Infusion of CIID BMC into irradiated syngeneic B6 or allogeneic B10.A mice produced normal lymphoid cell reconstitution including CD4+ T cells except for the absence of class II Ag-positive cells. However, irradiated B10.A mice reconstituted with CIID BMC rejected all B6 and a majority of CIID skin grafts despite continued maintenance of high degree chimerism. B10.A mice reconstituted with B6 BMC maintained chimerism and accepted both B6 and CIID skin grafts. Thus, expression of MHC class II Ag on BMC is essential for allograft tolerance induction and peripheral chimerism with cells deficient in class II Ag does not guarantee allograft acceptance.  相似文献   

10.
Soluble MHC/peptide tetramers that can directly bind the TCR allow the direct visualization and quantitation of Ag-specific T cells in vitro and in vivo. We used HY-D(b) tetramers to assess the numbers of HY-reactive CD8+ T cells in HYTCR-transgenic mice and in naive, wild-type C57BL/6 (B6) mice. As expected, tetramer staining showed the majority of T cells were male-specific CD8+ T cells in female HY-TCR mice. Staining of B6 mice showed a small population of male-specific CD8+ T cells in female mice. The effect of administration of soluble MHC class I tetramers on CD8+ T cell activation in vivo was unknown. Injection of HY-D(b) tetramer in vivo effectively primed female mice for a more rapid proliferative response to both HY peptide and male splenocytes. Furthermore, wild-type B6 female mice injected with a single dose of HY-D(b) tetramer rejected B6 male skin grafts more rapidly than female littermates treated with irrelevant tetramer. In contrast, multiple doses of HY-D(b) tetramer did not further decrease graft survival. Rather, female B6 mice injected with multiple doses of HY-D(b) tetramer rejected male skin grafts more slowly than mice primed with a single injection of tetramer or irradiated male spleen cells, suggesting clonal exhaustion or anergy. Our data highlight the ability of soluble MHC tetramers to identify scarce alloreactive T cell populations and the use of such tetramers to directly modulate an Ag-specific T cell response in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
Improvement of the strategy to target tumor Ags to dendritic cells (DCs) for immunotherapy requires the identification of the most appropriate ligand/receptor pairing. We screened a library of Ab fragments on mouse DCs to isolate new potential Abs capable of inducing protective immune responses. The screening identified a high-affinity Ab against CD36, a multi-ligand scavenger receptor primarily expressed by the CD8alpha+ subset of conventional DCs. The Ab variable regions were genetically linked to the model Ag OVA and tested in Ag presentation assays in vitro and in vivo. Anti-CD36-OVA was capable of delivering exogenous Ags to the MHC class I and MHC class II processing pathways. In vivo, immunization with anti-CD36-OVA induced robust activation of naive CD4+ and CD8+ Ag-specific T lymphocytes and the differentiation of primed CD8+ T cells into long-term effector CTLs. Vaccination with anti-CD36-OVA elicited humoral and cell-mediated protection from the growth of an Ag-specific tumor. Notably, the relative efficacy of targeting CD11c/CD8alpha+ via CD36 or DEC205 was qualitatively different. Anti-DEC205-OVA was more efficient than anti-CD36-OVA in inducing early events of naive CD8+ T cell activation. In contrast, long-term persistence of effector CTLs was stronger following immunization with anti-CD36-OVA and did not require the addition of exogenous maturation stimuli. The results identify CD36 as a novel potential target for immunotherapy and indicate that the outcome of the immune responses vary by targeting different receptors on CD8alpha+ DCs.  相似文献   

12.
To determine the CD4 or CD8 phenotype of the Th lymphocyte which recognizes in vivo the MHC class I alloantigens, B10 recombinant mice were treated with anti-CD8 or anti-CD4 mAb and immunized with lymphoid cells from donors differing in the K or D region of the MHC. Alloantibodies were evaluated by a 51Cr-release assay or by indirect immunofluorescence. The production of IgG anti-Dd and anti-Kk alloantibodies was increased by the deletion of the CD8+ and absent in mice depleted of the CD4+ subset. These experiments indicate that the helper influence elicited by the recognition of a MHC class I alloantigen in vivo is due to cells of the CD4+CD8- phenotype.  相似文献   

13.
The intracytosolic niche for replication of Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) facilitates delivery of bacteria-derived Ags into the MHC class I pathway for subsequent stimulation of CD8 effector T cells. Using Lm strains that are equivalent for in vivo virulence yet express marked differences in the level of secretion of a protective target Ag, we have evaluated how these specific differences in secretion levels influences the magnitude and effector function of Ag-specific CD8 T cell responses following Lm injection. Immunization with low doses of a hyperantigen-secreting Lm strain stimulated enhanced target-Ag specific CD8 T cell responses compared with the magnitude stimulated following immunization with the same dose of wild-type Lm. The enhanced determinant-specific response was also evident by in vivo CTL activity, increased numbers of memory cells 4 wk following immunization, and enhanced antilisterial protection following a challenge infection. Initiation of antibiotic treatment 24 h following infection with wild-type Lm markedly reduced the magnitude of the effector CD8 T cell response. In contrast, antibiotic treatment initiated 24 h following immunization with the hyperantigen secreting strain of Lm did not impact the frequency of the target-Ag specific CD8 T cells. Thus, immunization with a low dose of a hyperantigen secreting Lm strain, followed by antibiotic treatment to limit the extent of the infection, may represent a safe strategy for the stimulation of enhanced effector CD8 T cell responses to specific Ag by a rLm vaccine.  相似文献   

14.
The function of the CD8 molecule in lympholysis mediated by cytotoxic T cells was investigated by examining possible contributions of ligands on the target cell to the inhibition of lysis observed with CD8-specific mAb. In order to evaluate a variety of target cells, including those not expressing the nominal Ag (NA) for which the CTL was specific, lysis was effected by cross-linking the CTL and the target cells with anti-CD3 mAb. Such CD3 redirected cytotoxicity was demonstrated to be inhibited by anti-CD8 mAb when low anti-CD3 mAb concentrations were used. The possibility that inhibition by anti-CD8 mAb resulted for competition for the FcR between the anti-CD3 mAb and anti-CD8 mAb was eliminated by targeting TNP-modified cells with an antibody heteroconjugate prepared from Fab fragments of anti-CD3 and anti-DNP antibodies. Inhibition of the lysis of target cells not expressing NA including those deficient in class I expression, demonstrated that neither NA nor class I expression was required for anti-CD8 mAb inhibition. Whether the anti-CD8 mAb inhibition required CD8 Ag interaction with any ligand on the target cell was further investigated by measuring exocytosis of enzyme granule from CTL activated with CD3-coated poly-styrene beads. CD8-specific mAb inhibited such CTL activation in this target cell-free system. A CD8(+), MHC class II-specific CTL clone, was used to show differential inhibition by anti-CD8 mAb, depending on the target cell, therefore providing evidence that anti-CD8 mAb binding does not generate an absolute off signal. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that anti-CD8 mAb affect the lytic process independent of the recognition of a ligand on the target cell by CD8.  相似文献   

15.
Murine T lymphocytes recognize nominal Ag presented by class I or class II MHC molecules. Most CD8+ T cells recognize Ag presented in the context of class I molecules, whereas most CD4+ cells recognize Ag associated with class II molecules. However, it has been shown that a proportion of T cells recognizing class I alloantigens express CD4 surface molecules. Furthermore, CD4+ T cells are sufficient for the rejection of H-2Kbm10 and H-2Kbm11 class I disparate skin grafts. It has been suggested that the CD4 component of an anti-class I response can be ascribed to T cells recognizing class I determinants in the context of class II MHC products. To examine the specificity and effector functions of class I-specific HTL, CD4+ T cells were stimulated with APC that differed from them at a class I locus. Specifically, a MLC was prepared involving an allogeneic difference only at the Ld region. CD4+ clones were derived by limiting dilution of bulk MLC cells. Two clones have been studied in detail. The CD4+ clone 46.2 produced IL-2, IL-3, and IFN-gamma when stimulated with anti-CD3 mAb, whereas the CD4+ clone 93.1 secreted IL-4 in addition to IL-2, IL-3, and IFN-gamma. Cloned 46.2 cells recognized H-2Ld directly, whereas recognition of Ld by 93.1 apparently was restricted by class II MHC molecules. Furthermore, cytolysis by both clones 46.2 and 93.1 was inhibited by the anti-CD4 mAb GK1.5. These results demonstrate that CD4+ T cells can respond to a class I difference and that a proportion of CD4+ T cells can recognize class I MHC determinants directly as well as in the context of class II MHC molecules.  相似文献   

16.
The ability to initiate and sustain CD8(+) T cell responses to tumors in vivo is hindered by the development of peripheral T cell tolerance against tumor-associated Ags. Approaches that counter the onset of T cell tolerance may preserve a pool of potentially tumor-reactive CD8(+) T cells. Administration of agonist Ab to the CD40 molecule, expressed on APCs, can enhance immunization approaches targeting T lymphocytes in an otherwise tolerance-prone environment. In this report, the effects of anti-CD40 administration on priming of naive CD8(+) T cells against an endogenous tumor Ag were investigated. Line 501 mice express the SV40 large T Ag oncoprotein as a transgene from the alpha-amylase promoter, resulting in the development of peripheral CD8(+) T cell tolerance to the H-2-D(b)-restricted immunodominant epitope I of T Ag by 6 mo of age, before the appearance of osteosarcomas. We demonstrate that naive epitope I-specific TCR transgenic (TCR-I) T cells undergo peripheral tolerance following adoptive transfer into 6-mo-old 501 mice. In contrast, administration of agonistic anti-CD40 Ab led to increased expansion of TCR-I T cells in 501 mice, the acquisition of effector function by TCR-I T cells and the establishment of T cell memory. Importantly, this enhanced priming effect of anti-CD40 administration did not require immunization and was effective even if administered after naive TCR-I T cells had encountered the endogenous T Ag. Thus, anti-CD40 administration can block the onset of peripheral tolerance and enhance the recruitment of functionally competent effector T cells toward an endogenous tumor Ag.  相似文献   

17.
Although the role of CD4(+) T regulatory cells (Treg) in transplantation tolerance has been established, putative mechanisms of Treg induction and function in vivo remain unclear. TLR4 signaling has been implicated in the regulation of CD4(+)CD25(+) Treg functions recently. In this study, we first examined the role of recipient TLR4 in the acquisition of operational CD4(+) Treg following CD154 blockade in a murine cardiac transplant model. Then, we determined whether TLR4 activation in allograft tolerant recipients would reverse alloimmune suppression mediated by CD4(+) Treg. We document that donor-specific immune tolerance was readily induced in TLR4-deficient recipients by a single dose of anti-CD154 mAb, similar to wild-type counterparts. The function and phenotype of CD4(+) Treg in both wild-type and TLR4 knockout long-term hosts was demonstrated by a series of depletion experiments examining their ability to suppress the rejection of secondary donor-type test skin grafts and to inhibit alloreactive CD8(+) T cell activation in vivo. Furthermore, TLR4 activation in tolerant recipients following exogenous LPS infusion in conjunction with donor-type skin graft challenge, failed to break Treg-mediated immune suppression. In conclusion, our data reveals a distinctive property of CD4(+) Treg in tolerant allograft recipients, whose induction and function are independent of TLR4 signaling.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Although cyclosporine (CsA) is a powerful immunosuppressive agent in organ transplantation, its efficacy in skin transplantation has not been examined completely. We have tested it as primary immunosuppression in a rat skin allograft model. Histoincompatible Brown-Norway skin grafts are rejected in untreated Lewis hosts within 9 +/- 1 days but survive for 22 +/- 3, 34 +/- 2, or 41 +/- 8 days after 7, 14, or 21 days of CsA treatment (15 mg/kg per day subcutaneously), respectively (p less than 0.001). Animals treated daily for 4 weeks died from drug toxicity; however, an initial 2-week course followed by a low maintenance dose (15 mg/kg every fourth day) produced indefinite (greater than 150 days) graft acceptance without side effects. The long-surviving grafts were supple, grew long hair, and showed normal histology. When the drug was stopped at any time during this maintenance period, early signs of rejection (hair loss, epidermal breakdown, and localized ulceration) occurred, which could be reversed completely by a short CsA "pulse" (15 mg/kg per day for 7 days). These experimental data support the potential application of CsA immunosuppression in human skin allotransplantation.  相似文献   

20.
Processing of exogenous protein Ags by APC leads predominantly to presentation of peptides on class II MHC and, thus, stimulation of CD4+ T cell responses. However, "cross-priming" can also occur, whereby peptides derived from exogenous Ags become displayed on class I MHC molecules and stimulate CD8+ T cell responses. We compared the efficiency of cross-priming with exogenous proteins to use of peptide Ags in human whole blood using a flow cytometry assay to detect T cell intracellular cytokine production. CD8+ T cell responses to whole CMV proteins were poorly detected (compared with peptide responses) in most CMV-seropositive donors. Such responses could be increased by using higher doses of Ag than were required to achieve maximal CD4+ T cell responses. A minority of donors displayed significantly more efficient CD8+ T cell responses to whole protein, even at low Ag doses. These responses were MHC class I-restricted and dependent upon proteosomal processing, indicating that they were indeed due to cross-priming. The ability to efficiently cross-prime was not a function of the number of dendritic cells in the donor's blood. Neither supplementation of freshly isolated dendritic cells nor use of cultured, Ag-pulsed dendritic cells could significantly boost CD8 responses to whole-protein Ags in poorly cross-priming donors. Interestingly, freshly isolated monocytes performed almost as well as dendritic cells in inducing CD8 responses via cross-priming. In conclusion, the efficiency of cross-priming appears to be poor in most donors and is dependent upon properties of the individual's APC and/or T cell repertoire. It remains unknown whether cross-priming ability translates into any clinical advantage in ability to induce CD8+ T cell responses to foreign Ags.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号