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1.
Screening with the flow cytometric IFN-gamma assay has led to the identification of a new immunogenic peptide (SSYRRPVGI) [corrected] from the influenza PB1 polymerase (PB1(703--711)) and a mimotope (ISPLMVAYM) from the PB2 polymerase (PB2(198--206)). CD8(+) T cells specific for K(b)PB1(703) make both IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha following stimulation with both peptides. The CD8(+) K(b)PB1(703)(+) population kills PB2(198)-pulsed targets, but cell lines stimulated with PB2(198) neither bind the K(b)PB1(703) tetramer nor become CTL. This CD8(+)K(b)PB1(703)(+) population is prominent in the primary response to an H3N2 virus, although it is much less obvious following secondary challenge of H1N1-primed mice. Even so, we can now account for >40% of the CD8(+) T cells in a primary influenza pneumonia and >85% of those present after H3N2 --> H1N1 challenge. Profiles of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha staining following in vitro stimulation have been traced for the four most prominent influenza peptides through primary and secondary responses into long-term memory. The D(b)NP(366) epitope that is immunodominant after the H3N2 --> H1N1 challenge shows the lowest frequencies of CD8(+) IFN-gamma(+)TNF-alpha(+) cells for >6 wk, and the intensity of IFN-gamma staining is also low for the first 3 wk. By 11 wk, however, the IFN-gamma/TNF-alpha profiles look to be similar for all four epitopes. At least by the criterion of cytokine production, there is considerable epitope-related functional diversity in the influenza virus-specific CD8(+) T cell response. The results for the K(b)PB1(703) epitope and the PB2(198) mimotope also provide a cautionary tale for those using the cytokine staining approach to identity antigenic peptides.  相似文献   

2.
Concurrent naive and memory CD8(+) T cell responses to an influenza A virus   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Memory Thy-1(+)CD8(+) T cells specific for the influenza A virus nucleoprotein (NP(366-374)) peptide were sorted after staining with the D(b)NP(366) tetramer, labeled with CFSE, and transferred into normal Thy-1.2(+) recipients. The donor D(b)NP(366)(+) T cells recovered 2 days later from the spleens of the Thy-1.2(+) hosts showed the CD62L(low)CD44(high)CD69(low) phenotype, characteristic of the population analyzed before transfer, and were present at frequencies equivalent to those detected previously in mice primed once by a single exposure to an influenza A virus. Analysis of CFSE-staining profiles established that resting tetramer(+) T cells divided slowly over the next 30 days, while the numbers in the spleen decreased about 3-fold. Intranasal infection shortly after cell transfer with a noncross-reactive influenza B virus induced some of the donor D(b)NP(366)(+) T cells to cycle, but there was no increase in the total number of transferred cells. By contrast, comparable challenge with an influenza A virus caused substantial clonal expansion, and loss of the CFSE label. Unexpectedly, the recruitment of naive Thy-1.2(+)CD8(+)D(b)NP(366)(+) host D(b)NP(366)(+) T cells following influenza A challenge was not obviously diminished by the presence of the memory Thy-1.1(+)CD8(+)D(b)NP(366)(+) donor D(b)NP(366)(+) set. Furthermore, the splenic response to an epitope (D(b)PA(224)) derived from the influenza acid polymerase (PA(224-233)) was significantly enhanced in the mice given the donor D(b)NP(366)(+) memory population. These experiments indicate that an apparent recall response may be comprised of both naive and memory CD8(+) T cells.  相似文献   

3.
The mechanisms underlying epitope selection and the potential impact of immunodominance hierarchies on peptide-based vaccines are not well understood. Recently, we have shown that two immunodominant MHC class I-restricted epitopes, NP(366-374)/D(b) (nucleoprotein (NP)) and PA(224-233)/D(b) (acidic polymerase (PA)), which drive the CD8(+) T cell response to influenza virus infection in C57BL/6 mice, are differentially expressed on infected cells. Whereas NP appears to be strongly expressed on all infected cells, PA appears to be strongly expressed on dendritic cells but only weakly expressed on nondendritic cells. Thus, the immune response to influenza virus may involve T cells specific for epitopes, such as PA, that are poorly expressed at the site of infection. To examine the consequences of differential Ag presentation on peptide vaccination, we compared the kinetics of the T cell response and influenza virus clearance in mice vaccinated with the NP or PA peptide. Vaccination with either the NP or PA peptide resulted in accelerated and enhanced Ag-specific T cell responses at the site of infection following influenza virus challenge. These T cells were fully functional in terms of their ability to produce IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha and to mediate cytolytic activity. Despite this enhancement of the Ag-specific T cell response, PA vaccination had a detrimental effect on the clearance of influenza virus compared with unvaccinated or NP-vaccinated mice. These data suggest that differential Ag presentation impacts the efficacy of T cell responses to specific epitopes and that this needs to be considered for the development of peptide-based vaccination strategies.  相似文献   

4.
Lipopeptide constructs offer a novel strategy for eliciting effective cellular and humoral immunity by directly targeting the vaccine Ag to dendritic cells. Importantly, it is not known how closely immunity generated after lipopeptide vaccination mimics that generated after natural infection. We have used a novel lipopeptide vaccine strategy to analyze both the quantity and quality of CD8(+) T cell immunity to an influenza A virus epitope derived from the acidic polymerase protein (PA(224)) in B6 mice. Vaccination with the PA(224) lipopeptide resulted in accelerated viral clearance after subsequent influenza virus infection. The lipopeptide was also effective at recalling secondary D(b)PA(224) responses in the lung. Lipopeptide recalled D(b)PA(224)-specific CTL produced lower levels of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha, but produced similar levels of IL-2 when compared with D(b)PA(224)-specific CTL recalled after virus infection. Furthermore, lipopeptide- and virus-recalled CTL demonstrated similar TCR avidity. Interestingly, lipopeptide administration resulted in expansion of D(b)PA(224)-specific CTL using a normally subdominant TCRBV gene segment. Overall, these results demonstrate that protective CTL responses elicited by lipopeptide vaccines can be correlated with TCR avidity, IL-2 production, and broad TCR repertoire diversity. Furthermore, factors that impact the quality of immunity are discussed. These factors are important considerations when evaluating the efficacy of novel vaccine strategies that target dendritic cells for eliciting cellular immunity.  相似文献   

5.
Respiratory challenge of H-2(b) mice with an H3N2 influenza A virus causes an acute, transient pneumonitis characterized by the massive infiltration of CD8(+) T lymphocytes. The inflammatory process monitored by quantitative analysis of lymphocyte populations recovered by bronchoalveolar lavage is greatly enhanced by prior exposure to an H1N1 virus, with the recall of cross-reactive CD8(+)-T-cell memory leading to more rapid clearance of the infection from the lungs. The predominant epitope recognized by the influenza virus-specific CD8(+) set has long been thought to be a nucleoprotein (NP(366-374)) presented by H-2D(b) (D(b)NP(366)). This continues to be true for the secondary H3N2-->H1N1 challenge but can no longer be considered the case for the primary response to either virus. Quantitative analysis based on intracellular staining for gamma interferon has shown that the polymerase 2 protein (PA(224-233)) provides a previously undetected epitope (D(b)PA(224)) that is at least as prominent as D(b)NP(366) during the first 10 days following primary exposure to either the H3N2 or H1N1 virus. The response to D(b)NP(366) seems to continue for longer, even when infectious virus can no longer be detected, but there is no obvious difference in the prevalence of memory T cells specific for D(b)NP(366) and D(b)PA(224). The generalization that the magnitude of the functional memory T-cell pool is a direct consequence of the clonal burst size during the primary response may no longer be useful. Previous CD8(+)-T-cell immunodominance heirarchies defined largely by cytotoxic T-lymphocyte assays may need to be revised.  相似文献   

6.
Cytokine polyfunctionality has recently emerged as a correlate of effective CTL immunity to viruses and tumors. Although the determinants of polyfunctionality remain unclear, there are published instances of a link between the production of multiple effector molecules and the peptide plus MHC class I molecule avidity of T cell populations. Influenza A virus infection of C57BL/6J mice induces CTL populations specific for multiple viral epitopes, each with varying proportions of monofunctional (IFN-γ(+) only) or polyfunctional (IFN-γ(+)TNF-α(+)IL-2(+)) CTLs. In this study, we probe the link between TCR avidity and polyfunctionality for two dominant influenza epitopes (D(b)NP(366) and D(b)PA(224)) by sequencing the TCR CDR3β regions of influenza-specific IFN-γ(+) versus IFN-γ(+)IL-2(+) cells, or total tetramer(+) versus high-avidity CTLs (as defined by the peptide plus MHC class I molecule-TCR dissociation rate). Preferential selection for particular clonotypes was evident for the high-avidity D(b)PA(224)-specific set but not for any of the other subsets examined. These data suggest that factors other than TCRβ sequence influence cytokine profiles and demonstrate no link between differential avidity and polyfunctionality.  相似文献   

7.
Handel A  Antia R 《Journal of virology》2008,82(16):7768-7772
Understanding immunodominance, the phenomenon of epitope-specific T cells expanding in an often distinctly hierarchical fashion, is important for the design of T-cell-based intervention strategies. Several recent studies have investigated immunodominance of H-2D(b)-restricted CD8(+) T cells specific for the nucleoprotein NP366 and acid polymerase PA224 epitopes during influenza A virus infection of C57BL/6 mice. CD8(+) T cells specific for these two epitopes are codominant during primary infection; NP366 dominates during secondary infection. While a number of explanations for this observation have been proposed, none of them can fully account for all the observed data. In this article, we use a simple mathematical model to explain the seemingly inconsistent data. We show that the dynamic interactions between CD8(+) T cells and antigen presentation lead to a situation where CD8(+) T cells are limiting during the initial response whereas antigen is limiting in the secondary response. This "numbers game" between antigen and CD8(+) T cells can reproduce the observed immunodominance of the NP336- and PA224-specific CD8(+) T cells, thereby explaining the reported experimental data.  相似文献   

8.
Virus-immune CD8(+) TCR repertoires specific for particular peptide-MHC class I complexes may be substantially shared between (public), or unique to, individuals (private). Because public TCRs can show reduced TdT-mediated N-region additions, we analyzed how TdT shapes the heavily public (to D(b)NP(366)) and essentially private (to D(b)PA(224)) CTL repertoires generated following influenza A virus infection of C57BL/6 (B6, H2(b)) mice. The D(b)NP(366)-specific CTL response was virtually clonal in TdT(-/-) B6 animals, with one of the three public clonotypes prominent in the wild-type (wt) response consistently dominating the TdT(-/-) set. Furthermore, this massive narrowing of TCR selection for D(b)NP(366) reduced the magnitude of D(b)NP(366)-specific CTL response in the virus-infected lung. Conversely, the D(b)PA(224)-specific responses remained comparable in both magnitude and TCR diversity within individual TdT(-/-) and wt mice. However, the extent of TCR diversity across the total population was significantly reduced, with the consequence that the normally private wt D(b)PA(224)-specific repertoire was now substantially public across the TdT(-/-) mouse population. The key finding is thus that the role of TdT in ensuring enhanced diversity and the selection of private TCR repertoires promotes optimal CD8(+) T cell immunity, both within individuals and across the species as a whole.  相似文献   

9.
The robust murine response to infection with Listeria monocytogenes makes an excellent model to study the functional development of immune cells. We investigated the cellular immune response to i.p. infection using intracellular cytokine staining to identify Ag-specific lymphocytes. CD4(+) peritoneal exudate cells obtained 10 days postinfection predominantly coexpressed TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and IL-2 after polyclonal or Ag stimulation. A population of cells simultaneously making TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma was also detected but at a lower frequency. By following the kinetics of the response to Listeria, we found that CD4(+) lymphocytes coexpressing TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma dominated on day 6 postinfection and then declined. From days 10-27, TNF-alpha(+)IFN-gamma(+)IL-2(+) (triple-positive) was the most prevalent cytokine phenotype, and the frequency steadily declined. These characteristic cytokine expression patterns were observed in both primary and secondary responses to Listeria infection and developed even when infection was terminated with antibiotic treatment. A cytokine-assisted immunization procedure resulted in both double- and triple-positive cells, but the clear predominance of triple-positive cells required Listeria infection. Triple-positive cells were preferentially noted in the peritoneal cavity tissue site; spleen cells displayed a predominant population of double-positive T cells (TNF-alpha(+)IFN-gamma(+)). We speculate that the appearance of triple-positive cells represents a functionally significant subset important in host defense at nonlymphoid tissue sites.  相似文献   

10.
The emergence of the novel reassortant A(H1N1)-2009 influenza virus highlighted the threat to the global population posed by an influenza pandemic. Pre-existing CD8(+) T-cell immunity targeting conserved epitopes provides immune protection against newly emerging strains of influenza virus, when minimal antibody immunity exists. However, the occurrence of mutations within T-cell antigenic peptides that enable the virus to evade T-cell recognition constitutes a substantial issue for virus control and vaccine design. Recent evidence suggests that it might be feasible to elicit CD8(+) T-cell memory pools to common virus mutants by pre-emptive vaccination. However, there is a need for a greater understanding of CD8(+) T-cell immunity towards commonly emerging mutants. The present analysis focuses on novel and immunodominant, although of low pMHC-I avidity, CD8(+) T-cell responses directed at the mutant influenza D(b)NP(366) epitope, D(b)NPM6A, following different routes of infection. We used a C57BL/6J model of influenza to dissect the effectiveness of the natural intranasal (i.n.) versus intraperitoneal (i.p.) priming for generating functional CD8(+) T cells towards the D(b)NPM6A epitope. In contrast to comparable CD8(+) T-cell responses directed at the wild-type epitopes, D(b)NP(366) and D(b)PA(224), we found that the priming route greatly affected the numbers, cytokine profiles and TCR repertoire of the responding CD8(+) T cells directed at the D(b)NPM6A viral mutant. As the magnitude, polyfunctionality, and T-cell repertoire diversity are potential determinants of the protective efficacy of CD8(+) T-cell responses, our data have implications for the development of vaccines to combat virus mutants.  相似文献   

11.
Culturing naive T cells with 50 microM selected HIV-1 envelope peptides for 6 days in the presence of IL-2 drives the emergence of a substantial CD8(+) population that secretes IFN-gamma following short-term stimulation with 1 microM peptide. This response is H-2K(b) restricted, epitope specific, and requires the continuing presence of peptide. The same effect was found for known H-2D(b)-restricted peptides from two influenza virus proteins. The great majority of these influenza-specific CD8(+)IFN-gamma(+) T cells neither stained with the cognate tetramer nor expressed the TCR Vbeta bias that is characteristic of the CD8(+) set expanded in vivo during an infection. Thus, multipoint binding of low affinity TCRs on naive CD8(+) T cells can drive peptide-specific cytokine production. However, at least for two influenza-derived epitopes, the avidity of the TCR-MHC peptide interaction appears to be insufficient to stabilize a tetrameric complex of MHC class I glycoprotein plus peptide on the lymphocyte surface.  相似文献   

12.
Inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-gamma and TNF produced by Ag-stimulated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells are important in defense against microbial infection. However, production of these cytokines must be tightly regulated to prevent immunopathology. Previous studies, conducted with BALB/c mice, have suggested that 1) CD8(+) T cells maintain IFN-gamma production but transiently produce TNF in the continued presence of Ag and 2) lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-specific and in vitro-propagated effector CD8(+) T cells could rapidly cycle IFN-gamma production ON/OFF/ON in response to Ag exposure, removal, and re-exposure. In contrast with CD8(+) T cells, our results show that Listeria monocytogenes-specific CD4(+) T cells from C57BL/6 mice rapidly initiate (ON cycling) and maintain production of both IFN-gamma and TNF in the continued presence of Ag. Upon Ag removal, production of both cytokines rapidly ceases (OFF cycling). However, if the initial stimulation was maximal, Ag-specific CD4(+) T cells were unable to reinitiate cytokine production after a second Ag exposure. Furthermore, L. monocytogenes-specific CD8(+) T cells in the same mice and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus-specific CD8(+) T cells in BALB/c mice also underwent ON/OFF cycling, but if the initial Ag stimulus was maximal, they could not produce IFN-gamma after Ag re-exposure. As the initial Ag dose was reduced, the number of cells producing cytokine in response to the second Ag exposure exhibited a corresponding increase. However, T cells that were marked for IFN-gamma secretion during the first stimulation did not contribute cytokine production during the second stimulation. Thus, T cells are not able to undergo rapid ON/OFF/ON cytokine cycling in vitro in response to Ag.  相似文献   

13.
Influenza A virus infection of C57BL/6 (B6) mice is characterized by prominent CD8(+) T cell responses to H2D(b) complexed with peptides from the viral nucleoprotein (NP(366), ASNENMETM) and acid polymerase (PA(224), SSLENFRAYV). An in vivo cytotoxicity assay that depends on the adoptive transfer of peptide-pulsed, syngeneic targets was used in this study to quantitate the cytotoxic potential of D(b)NP(366)- and D(b)PA(224)-specific acute and memory CD8(+) T cells following primary or secondary virus challenge. Both T cell populations displayed equivalent levels of in vivo effector function when comparable numbers were transferred into naive B6 hosts. Cytotoxic activity following primary infection clearly correlated with the frequency of tetramer-stained CD8(+) T cells. This relationship looked, however, to be less direct following secondary exposure, partly because the numbers of CD8(+)D(b)NP(366)(+) T cells were greatly in excess. However, calculating the in vivo E:T ratios indicated that in vivo lysis, like many other biological functions, is threshold dependent. Furthermore, the capacity to eliminate peptide-pulsed targets was independent of the differentiation state (i.e., primary or secondary effectors) and was comparable for the two T cell specificities that were analyzed. These experiments provide insights that may be of value for adoptive immunotherapy, where careful consideration of both the activation state and the number of effector cells is required.  相似文献   

14.
Earlier studies of influenza-specific CD8(+) T cell immunodominance hierarchies indicated that expression of the H2K(k) MHC class I allele greatly diminishes responses to the H2D(b)-restriced D(b)PA(224) epitope (acid polymerase, residues 224-233 complexed with H2D(b)). The results suggested that the presence of H2K(k) during thymic differentiation led to the deletion of a prominent Vβ7(+) subset of D(b)PA(224)-specific TCRs. The more recent definition of D(b)PA(224)-specific TCR CDR3β repertoires in H2(b) mice provides a new baseline for looking again at this possible H2K(k) effect on D(b)PA(224)-specific TCR selection. We found that immune responses to several H2D(b)- and H2K(b)-restricted influenza epitopes were indeed diminished in H2(bxk) F(1) versus homozygous mice. In the case of D(b)PA(224), lower numbers of naive precursors were part of the explanation, though a similar decrease in those specific for the D(b)NP(366) epitope did not affect response magnitude. Changes in precursor frequency were not associated with any major loss of TCR diversity and could not fully account for the diminished D(b)PA(224)-specific response. Further functional and phenotypic characterization of influenza-specific CD8(+) T cells suggested that the expansion and differentiation of the D(b)PA(224)-specific set is impaired in the H2(bxk) F(1) environment. Thus, the D(b)PA(224) response in H2(bxk) F(1) mice is modulated by factors that affect the generation of naive epitope-specific precursors and the expansion and differentiation of these T cells during infection, rather than clonal deletion of a prominent Vβ7(+) subset. Such findings illustrate the difficulties of predicting and defining the effects of MHC class I diversification on epitope-specific responses.  相似文献   

15.
Because little is known about lymphocyte responses in the nasal mucosa, lymphocyte accumulation in the nasal mucosa, nasal-associated lymphoid tissue (NALT), and cervical lymph nodes (CLN) were determined after primary and heterosubtypic intranasal influenza challenge of mice. T cell accumulation peaked in the nasal mucosa on day 7, but peaked slightly earlier in the CLN (day 5) and later (day 10) in the NALT. Tetrameric staining of nasal mucosal cells revealed a peak accumulation of CD8 T cells specific for either the H-2D(b) influenza nucleoprotein epitope 366-374 (D(b)NP(366)) or the H-2D(b) polymerase 2 protein epitope 224-233 (D(b)PA(224)) at 7 days. By day 13, D(b)PA(224)-specific CD8 T cells were undetectable in the mucosa, whereas D(b)NP(366)-specific CD8 T cells persisted for at least 35 days in the mucosa and spleen. After heterosubtypic virus challenge, the accumulation of CD8 T cells in the nasal mucosa was quicker, more intense, and predominantly D(b)NP(366) specific relative to the primary inoculation. The kinetics and specificity of the CD8 T cell response were similar to those in the CLN, but the responses in the NALT and spleen were again slower and more protracted. These results indicate that similar to what was reported in the lung, D(b)NP(366)-specific CD8 T cells persist in the nasal mucosa after primary influenza infection and predominate in an intensified nasal mucosal response to heterosubtypic challenge. In addition, differences in the kinetics of the CD8 T cell responses in the CLN, NALT, and spleen suggest different roles of these lymphoid tissues in the mucosal response.  相似文献   

16.
CD8(+) T cells use a number of effector mechanisms to protect the host against infection. We have studied human CD8(+) T cells specific for CMV pp65(495-503) epitope, or for staphylococcal enterotoxin B, for the expression patterns of five cytokines and cytolytic effector molecules before and after antigenic stimulation. Ex vivo, the cytolytic molecule granzyme B was detected in a majority of circulating CMV-specific CD8(+) T cells, whereas perforin was rarely expressed. Both were highly expressed after Ag-specific activation accompanied by CD45RO up-regulation. TNF-alpha, IFN gamma, and IL-2 were sequentially acquired on recognition of Ag, but surprisingly, only around half of the CMV-specific CD8(+) T cells responded to antigenic stimuli with production of any cytokine measured. A dominant population coexpressed TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma, and cells expressing TNF-alpha only, IFN-gamma only, or all three cytokines together also occurred at lower but clearly detectable frequencies. Interestingly, perforin expression and production of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha in CD8(+) T cells responding to staphylococcal enterotoxin B appeared to be largely segregated, and no IL-2 was detected in perforin-positive cells. Together, these data indicate that human CD8(+) T cells can be functionally segregated in vivo and have implications for the understanding of human CD8(+) T cell differentiation and specialization and regulation of effector mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of CD8 T cell IFN-gamma responses as they occur in situ are defined here during lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infections, and a unique mechanism for the innate cytokines IFN-alphabeta and IL-18 in promoting these responses is defined. Infections of mice with Armstrong or WE strains of LCMV induced an unexpectedly early day 4 IFN-gamma response detectable in serum samples and spleen and liver homogenates. Production of IFN-gamma was MHC class I/CD8 dependent, but did not require IL-12, NK cells, TCR-gammadelta T cells, MHC class II, or CD4 T cells. Peak response required specific Ag recognition, as administration of antagonist peptide partially impaired day 4 IFN-gamma induction, and viral peptide stimulation enhanced CD8 T cell IFN-gamma expression in culture. The IFN-gamma response was associated with IL-18 and IFN-alphabeta expression. Furthermore, both factors augmented peptide-driven IFN-gamma production in culture, and mice lacking IL-18 or IFN-alphabeta functions had reduced day 4 IFN-gamma. Collectively, these results demonstrate that during viral infections, there is a dramatic in vivo CD8 T cell response preceding maximal expansion of these cells, and that the mechanism supporting this response is dependent on endogenous innate cytokines. Because stimulation by microbial products is linked to innate cytokine expression, the studies also suggest a pathway for precisely limiting T cell functions to times of need.  相似文献   

18.
The H-2Db-restricted CD8 T cell immune response to influenza A is directed at two well-described epitopes, nucleoprotein 366 (NP366) and acid polymerase 224 (PA224). The responses to the two epitopes are very different. The epitope NP366-specific response is dominated by TCR clonotypes that are public (shared by most mice), whereas the epitope PA224-specific response is private (unique within each infected animal). In addition to being public, the NP366-specific response is dominated by a few clonotypes, when T cell clonotypes expressing the Vbeta8.3 element are analyzed. Herein, we show that this response is similarly public when the NP366+Vbeta4+ CD8 T cell response is analyzed. Furthermore, to determine whether these features resulted in differences in total TCR diversity in the NP366+ and PA224+ responses, we quantified the number of different CD8 T clonotypes responding to each epitope. We calculated that 50-550 clonotypes recognized each epitope in individual mice. Thus, although the character of the response to the two epitopes appeared to be different (private and diverse vs public and dominated by a few clonotypes), similar numbers of precursor cells responded to both epitopes and this number was of similar magnitude to that previously reported for other viral CD8 T cell epitopes. Therefore, even in CD8 T cell responses that appear to be oligoclonotypic, the total response is highly diverse.  相似文献   

19.
Although IL-10 acts as an inhibitory cytokine for APC and CD4(+) T cell function, its effects on CD8(+) T cells are unclear. Additionally, little is known about whether initial priming in the presence of IL-10 can have long-lasting effects and influence subsequent CD8(+) T cell responses that occur in the absence of the cytokine. In the present study, we clarified the role of IL-10 during primary responses and examined whether exposure to IL-10 during initial priming of CD8(+) T cells impacted secondary responses. To determine the effect of IL-10 on Ag-specific T cell responses, peptide-pulsed IL-10R2(-/-) splenic dendritic cells were used to prime T cells from OT-I CD8(+) TCR transgenic mice. During the primary response, the presence of IL-10 resulted in enhancement of CD8(+) T cell numbers without detectable alterations in the kinetics or percentage of cells that underwent proliferation. A modest increase in survival, not attributable to Bcl-2 or Bcl-x(L), was also observed with IL-10 treatment. Other parameters of CD8(+) T cell function, including IL-2, IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and granzyme production, were unaltered. In contrast, initial exposure to IL-10 during the primary response resulted in decreased OT-I expansion during secondary stimulation. This was accompanied by lowered IL-2 levels and reduced percentages of proliferating BrdU(+) cells and OT-I cells that were CD25(high). IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and granzyme production were unaltered. These data suggest that initial exposure of CD8(+) T cells to IL-10 may be temporarily stimulatory; however, programming of the cells may be altered, resulting in diminished overall responses.  相似文献   

20.
Differentiation and maturation of monocytes are accompanied by the expression of specific surface glycoproteins, the secretion of cytokines, and the capacity to respond to ligands. These changes may be influenced by interactions with hormones, soluble lymphocytic products, or direct contact with lymphocytes. We have studied two distinct pathways in the differentiation of a human monocytic cell line, THP-1: one being induced by IFN-gamma and the other by 1 alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3). In THP-1 cells, IFN-gamma induces cell surface expression of HLA-DR and CD54 and production of IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6. In contrast, 1,25(OH)2D3 increases cell surface expression of CD11b and CD14, but fails to stimulate cytokine production. Direct contact of THP-1 with stimulated fixed T cells markedly induces IL-1 beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 production by THP-1. Production is higher when THP-1 have been previously exposed to 1,25(OH)2D3 as compared to prior exposure to IFN-gamma. mAb raised against certain relevant cell surface glycoproteins on THP-1 were tested for their ability to block the response of THP-1 to T cells. Antibodies to CD11a, CD11b, and CD11c, alone or in combination, only partially blocked IL-1 beta production by THP-1, whereas antibodies to CD54 and CD14 did not. Thus other unknown structures on the THP-1 cells may be involved in the induction of THP-1 cytokine production by T cell contact.  相似文献   

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