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1.
When administered 2 days after immunization with 0.5 microgram Type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III), the T lymphocyte mitogen concanavalin A (Con A) stimulates a 2.6-to 7-fold enhancement of the plaque-forming cells (PFC) response to SSS-III in vivo. This enhancement requires the presence of amplified T cells, which act by driving PFC or their precursors to extra rounds of proliferation. The extra proliferation that can be stimulated by Con A is not seen in the normal primary response to SSS-III; but treatment with anti-lymphocyte serum (ALS) to remove suppressor T cells will permit the additional proliferation to occur. This indicates that in the primary response to SSS-III, suppressor T cells act on amplifier T cells to limit the magnitude of the antibody response. Only suppression of B cells can account for the further suppression induced by Con A given at the time of immunization or by low-dose paralysis of the SSS-III response. The relatively late development of amplified activity compared to suppressor activity appears to account for the absence of amplifier activity after primary immunization with SSS-III. It is apparent that one can explain the regulatory effects observed during the development of an immune response to SSS-III only by considering both T cell- B cell and T cell- T cell interactions, together with the temporal relationships involved in those interactions.  相似文献   

2.
The administration of a subimmunogenic dose of type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III) produces an antigen-specific T cell-dependent phenomenon termed low-dose paralysis (immunologic unresponsiveness). This form of unresponsiveness can be transferred by spleen cells obtained 5 to 24 hr after priming, and the suppressive activity of the transferred cells is abolished by prior treatment with monoclonal anti-Lyt-2 and anti-I-J antibody in the presence of complement, indicating that suppression is mediated by a distinct subset of T cells (suppressor T cells). If primed spleen cells are transferred 24 to 72 hr after immunization with SSS-III, however, the resulting antibody response of immunized recipients is enhanced. Greater enhancement is noted when transferred cells, pretreated with monoclonal anti-Lyt-2 antibody plus complement to remove suppressor T cells, are used; such enhancement is attributed to amplifier T cells. These findings indicate suppressor T cells regulate the antibody response to SSS-III by influencing the expansion of SSS-III-specific clones of B cells as well as the expression of amplifier T cell activity; the latter causes B cells to proliferate further in response to SSS-III.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of adult splenectomy on the expression of suppressor and amplifier T cell activity was examined with respect to the serum antibody response to Type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III) by using a sensitive radioimmunoassay. Suppressor T cell activity, as measured by the degree of low-dose paralysis induced, was not impaired in the least by splenectomy; however, amplifier T cell activity was almost completely eliminated within 7 days after splenectomy. These findings indicate that suppressor T cell activity is not confined solely to the spleen, the major site of antibody synthesis after immunization with SSS-III, and that the spleen may be an important site for the generation and/or maintenance of amplifier T cell activity.  相似文献   

4.
Previous studies on the basis for the immunosuppressive potential of adrenal corticosteroids have stressed that the effects of these agents on immune functions depend on the animal species being considered, as well as the subpopulations of lymphocytes involved in the expression of immune functions examined. In the present work, we have evaluated the effect of a single dose of hydrocortisone on three different immunoregulatory functions that can influence the magnitude of an antibody response to Type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III) in mice; these functions include suppressor, amplifier, and helper activity that are dependent upon the presence of distinct subpopulations of thymus-derived (T) cells. The results obtained show that a single injection of a relatively large dose of hydrocortisone, when given at the time of priming with carrier, eliminated all evidence of carrier-specific helper T cell activity; hydrocortisone was also found to eliminate a significant amount of helper T cell activity when given after such activity had been generated. But, under the same experimental conditions, suppressor and amplifier T cell activities were unaffected, even in this steroid-sensitive species. Such selective sensitivity may account for some of the immunosuppressive potency of steroids.  相似文献   

5.
The present study investigates the augmenting effect of tuberculin- (PPD) reactive amplifier T cells on the induction of syngeneic tumor immunity. PPD-reactive helper (amplifier) T cell activity was generated in C3H/HeJ mice by appropriate immunization with heat-killed Mycobacterium (Tbc). Immunization of these Tbc-primed mice with PPD-coupled syngeneic X5563 tumor cells led to augmented generation of in vivo tumor-neutralizing activity contingent on the presence of PPD-reactive amplifier T cell activity. Splenic T cells from these mice exhibited potent tumor-neutralizing activity using Winn's assay, whereas spleen cells from mice not primed with Tbc before PPD-X5563 immunization failed to neutralize viable X5563 tumor cells. After establishing that the neutralizing activity was tumor specific and mediated by T cells, the applicability of this augmentation of tumor-specific immunity to an immunotherapy model was explored. Immunization with PPD-X5563 in the early stages of the tumor-bearing state induced potent anti-tumor activity sufficient to reject the growing tumor. Pretreatment of mice with cyclophosphamide or light x-irradiation (250 R), procedures that eliminate suppressor cell activity nonspecifically, before priming with Tbc further potentiated the anti-tumor activity under these conditions. Thus, the present study elucidates the augmenting effect of PPD-reactive amplifier T cells in the induction of tumor-specific immunity and provides an effective method of immunotherapy in tumor-bearing animals.  相似文献   

6.
Amplifier T cell activity can be transferred by spleen cells harvested 72 hr after priming with type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III) and can be abolished by treating the transferred cells with monoclonal anti-Lyt-1, or anti-Thy-1 antibodies in the presence of complement; thus, amplifier cells represent a distinct subpopulation of T cells. Amplifier T cells were found to be sensitive to irradiation but not to treatment with cyclophosphamide. When amplifier cells were transferred to athymic nude (nu/nu) mice, the enhancement obtained was much greater than that produced in thymus-bearing (nu/+) mice; this is presumably due to the lack of suppressor T cell activity in nu/nu mice that enables amplifier T cell activity to be expressed more fully. Amplifier T cells also were found to be present in peripheral blood; these amplifier T cells were Lyt-2- in phenotype. Although the induction and activation of amplifier T cells appear to be antigen-specific, the product made by amplifier T cells may not be antigen specific in its mode of action. Because amplifier T cells can be induced and activated by exposure to immune B cells, specificity is presumably due in whole or in part to the ability of amplifier T cells to recognize the idiotypic determinants of B cell-associated antibody specific for SSS-III.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to determine the role of T helper (Th) cells in the immune response to UV-induced tumors. Repeated exposure of mice to UV radiation results in the production of suppressor T lymphocytes that facilitate tumor growth by inhibiting host immunity. To investigate whether the suppressor T cells inhibit the response to UV tumors by blocking the generation of Th, we employed an indirect method for measuring helper cell activity. We found that Th were produced in normal mice after immunization with UV-induced tumors. These Th appeared to be specific for the immunizing tumors, in contrast to the UV-induced suppressor cells, which recognize UV-induced tumors as a group. The suppressor T cells responsible for inhibiting tumor rejection have no effect on tumor-specific helper cell activity in vitro. However, UV-induced suppressor T cells transferred into unirradiated mice seem to block the generation of helper cell activity after immunization with UV-produced tumors. These results suggest the UV-induced suppressor cells may prevent tumor rejection by blocking the generation of Th.  相似文献   

8.
Supernatant fluid (SF) derived from spleen cell cultures, obtained from mice 16 hr after immunization with 0.5 microgram of Type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III), suppressed the antibody response when SF was given (i.v.) 3 hr before immunization with SSS-III. Such suppression was antigen specific and could be reproduced by SF derived from cultures of T cells from mice immunized with SSS-III (0.5 microgram) or by SF derived from cultures of spleen cells from mice primed with a subimmunogenic dose of SSS-III (0.005 microgram). Adsorption of SF with SSS-III covalently bound to a Sepharose 4B column did not alter the ability of SF to suppress the SSS-III-specific antibody response. However, adsorption of SF with Ig+ (B) cells from mice immunized with 0.5 microgram SSS-III completely removed the suppressive activity. Significant (p less than 0.05) suppression of the antibody response was observed only when SF was administered (i.v.) 24 hr before to 24 hr after immunization with 0.5 microgram of SSS-III. These results suggest that suppressor T cells generated in response to SSS-III function by releasing a soluble factor(s) that binds to determinants on B cells rather than antigen; this soluble factor(s) acts directly on antigen-stimulated B cells or inhibits the induction of amplifier T cells.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously reported that BALB/c mice immunized with 10 micrograms of a Pseudomonas aeruginosa polysaccharide antigen (PS) and 100 micrograms vinblastine sulfate develop T cell-mediated protective immunity, but fail to generate an antibody response. Vinblastine functions in this system to remove a suppressor cell that normally inhibits expression of this form of immunity after PS immunization. T cells from CB.20 mice immunized with the 10 micrograms of PS and 100 micrograms vinblastine fail to kill P. aeruginosa in vitro. These mice are allotype congenic with BALB/c mice, differing at loci closely linked to the IgH-1 locus. Immunization of CB.20 mice with 10 micrograms PS and 100 micrograms vinblastine results in the appearance of T cells which suppress in vitro bactericidal activity of BALB/c T cells. In the current study we found that T cell-mediated bactericidal activity can be generated in CB.20 mice by increasing the dose of vinblastine given at the time of PS immunization. The phenotype of the CB.20 bactericidal T cell generated by high dose vinblastine is identical to that of the BALB/c bactericidal T cell, and the CB.20 bactericidal T cell can adoptively transfer protective immunity to granulocytopenic mice. After immunization of BALB/c and CB.20 mice with PS alone, approximately one log fewer CB.20 T cells than BALB/c T cells are required to suppress bacterial killing in vitro. Furthermore, the number of CB.20 T cells required to suppress in vitro bacterial killing is directly correlated with the dose of vinblastine administered at the time of immunization. Increasing the immunizing dose of PS overcomes suppressor activity and allows the generation of bactericidal T cells in BALB/c mice without a requirement for vinblastine. CB.20 mice fail to generate bactericidal T cells after immunization with high doses of PS. These results indicate that CB.20 and BALB/c mice both possess the full repertoire of T cells required to express bactericidal T cell activity and that the differences in their responses reflect only quantitative differences in suppressor cell activity.  相似文献   

10.
Mice of different ages were evaluated with respect to their ability to give a plaque-forming cell (PFC) response to Type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSSIII), as well as the degree of amplifier and suppressor thymus-derived(T) cell activity present. Although the magnitude of the PFC response to an optimally immunogenic dose of SSS-III for 2-and 3-week old mice was only 7% and 14%, respectively, of that produced by adult (8-week old) mice, values comparable to those of adult animals were attained by 4 weeks of age; no significant changes in the ability to respond to SSS-III occurred thereafter. Amplifier T cell activity, which was minimal at 2 to 4 weeks of age, matured slowly and did not reach a maximum until 8 to 10 weeks of age. By contrast, suppressor T cell activity appeared to be fully developed at least as early as 2 weeks of age; here, the inhibitory effects produced could by abrogated by depletion of T cells, indicating that the unresponsiveneness induced by such cells does not result in the depletion ot irreversible inactivation of B cells capable of responding to SSS-III. These findings suggest that the inhibitory effects of suppressor T cells are predominant in young mice and that such cells may play an important role in determining the ease with which unresponsiveness is induced in neonates, and in the prevention of autoimmune disease. Also, studies conducted with adult-thymectomized mice showed that both amplifier and suppressor T cells, once seeded to the periphery, are stable and do not depend upon the presence of intact thymus for the expression or renewal of their activity.  相似文献   

11.
We previously demonstrated that immunization with low (10 micrograms) doses of high m.w. polysaccharide from the gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa generates T cells that suppress the ability of antibacterial T cells (Tab) to protect against bacterial infection. The current studies indicate that Ts cells with properties identical to those elicited by low dose polysaccharide immunization can be generated by immunization with Tab. Tab-elicited Ts cells can abrogate in vivo induction and in vitro and in vivo expression of antibacterial T cell activity. Tab-elicited Ts are Ag-specific and H-2 restricted in their suppressor activity. Non-immune T cells fail to elicit suppressor activity. These studies provide additional evidence that the protective T cell response to P. aeruginosa is controlled by a network of T cells that are probably recognizing idiotypic determinants on P. aeruginosa-immune T and B cells.  相似文献   

12.
Mice were immunized for contact sensitivity and antibody production by painting the skin with picryl chloride. Lymph node and spleen cells taken 4 days later transferred contact sensitivity. However, cells taken at 7–8 days failed to transfer but were able to block the transfer by 4 day immune cells. These suppressor cells occurred in the regional lymph nodes, spleen and thymus. The suppressor activity of lymph node and spleen cells was due to B cells as shown by the effect of anti-θ serum and complement, nylon wool filtration and separation of EAC positive and negative cells by centrifugation on a discontinuous gradient. The transfer of fractions rich or poor in macrophages showed that the suppressor cell in the transferred population was not a macrophage. Separation using EAC rosettes suggested that B cells were responsible for the suppressor activity in the thymus.T cells isolated from the lymph nodes and spleen 7–8 days after immunization transferred contact sensitivity although the initial population was inactive. This indicates that passive transfer cells are present in the regional lymph nodes and spleen at later times after immunization but cannot be demonstrated because of the presence of suppressor B cells. However, no passive transfer cells were found in the thymus. The production of B suppressor cells required little or no T cell help and following immunization the spleens of reconstituted (B) mice were at least as active as control cells in causing suppression. There are several different suppressor cells which act in the picryl system and the B suppressor cells in immunized mice described here are distinct from the T suppressor cells in mice injected with picryl sulphonic acid.  相似文献   

13.
Either S3-coupled spleen cells (S3-SC) or soluble S3 activates two populations of regulatory T cells, T suppressor cells (Ts) and contrasuppressor T cells (Tcs). The latter cells function to mask the activity of Ts in unfractionated T cell populations, so that Ts can be detected only after removal of Tcs. Activation of Tcs by S3 may be required for induction of an antibody response to S3. This is suggested by the findings that Tcs are activated only by immunogenic doses of S3, that Tcs are not detectable in the spleens of mice tolerant to S3, and that (CBA/N X BALB/c)F1 male (xid) mice, which are genetically unresponsive to S3, do not develop Tcs after immunization with S3. Moreover, the kinetics of activation of Tcs by S3 closely parallels the kinetics of the antibody response to S3. Tcs have no detectable activity in the absence of Ts, indicating that these cells do not function as amplifier or helper T cells.  相似文献   

14.
Prior intraperitoneal (i.p.) or oral administration of the polysaccharide preparation from a kind of mushroom, Ganoderma applanatum (Pers.) Pat. of Basidiomycetes, exerted an enhancing effect on the induction of delayed hypersensitivity (DH) to protein antigen as measured by the footpad reaction (FPR), and expanded the size of T cell memory for the IgG antibody response. One of the active principles was partially purified and found to be associated with a polysaccharide-rich fraction. The induction of DH was enhanced by treatment with an appropriate dose of the mushroom extract, whereas increasing the dose resulted in almost complete loss of the enhancing activity. The mechanism for the enhancing effect of the mushroom extract on the induction of DH was explored by the adoptive cell transfer technique. Although an i.p. injection of methylated bacterial α-amylase (M-BαA) in incomplete Freund's adjuvant (IFA) has been found to generate in the spleen the antigen-specific suppressor T cells capable of inhibiting the induction of DH 5 days after immunization, the same treatment of mice given prior injections of the mushroom extract did not raise the suppressor cell activity, but transfer of these spleen cells (6 × 107) into syngeneic recipient mice which had been primed with a subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of M-BαA in complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) resulted in substantial amplification of the expression of DH. The absence of effector T cells for DH in the transferred spleen cells was confirmed by the failure to transfer DH into cyclophosphamide (CY)-treated mice with the amplifying cells. The amplifying activity was antigen-nonspecific and mediated by cells sensitive to treatment with anti-θ antiserum plus complement. Therefore, the nonspecific enhancing effect of the mushroom extract could not be explained by the possibility that pretreatment with the extract eliminated the antigen-specific suppressor T cells. Other adoptive cell transfer experiments revealed that nylon wool-passed cells from mice unprimed but treated with the mushroom extract were able to exert an enhancing activity on the expression of effector T cells in DH. The results indicate that the treatment with an appropriate dose of the extract enhances the induction of DH by activation of the nonspecific amplifier T cells.  相似文献   

15.
Spleen cells taken from mice soon after infection with Trypanosoma brucei S 42 enhance the primary in vitro antibody response of normal spleen cells to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), but do not affect their response to DNP-Ficoll. Spleen cells harvested later in the infection (day 6 onwards) suppress the antibody response of normal spleen cells to both SRBC and DNP-Ficoll. The enhancing and suppressive effects of "infected" spleen cells are sensitive to treatment with anti-Thy 1.2 anti-serum and complement, and can be mediated by nylon wool-purified populations of T cells. The enhancing T cell is sensitive to ALS, not lost within 4 weeks of adult thymectomy, and bears the Ly-1+, 23- phenotype. The suppressor T cell is insensitive to ALS, lost within 20 weeks of adult thymectomy, and bears the Ly-1+, 23+ phenotype. The significance of the activation of distinct helper and suppressor T cells is discussed in relation to the pathogenesis of trypanosomiasis.  相似文献   

16.
Mice infected neonatally with mouse thymic virus (TA) were evaluated at different ages with respect to their ability to give a plaque-forming cell (PFC) response to type III pneumococcal polysaccharide (SSS-III), as well as the degree of amplifier and suppressor thymus-derived (T) cell activity present. B cell activity matured rapidly from 2 to 4 weeks of age and was not affected by TA infection. Amplifier T cell activity matured progressively over the first 8 weeks of life and was transiently suppressed in TA-infected mice at 4 weeks of age. Suppressor T cell activity measured at 2,4, and 6 weeks of age was unaffected by TA. The findings suggest that TA is highly tropic for T cells and has selective effects on subpopulations of T cells.  相似文献   

17.
The cytotoxic T cell against a methylcholanthrene-induced sarcoma, S1509a, was induced in syngeneic mice by deliberate immunization with mitomycin C (MMC)-treated live tumor cells. The soluble tumor antigen (STA) extracted from the same tumor by 3 M KCl was, however, unable to induce the cytotoxic T cell upon immunization, although it was able to activate predominantly the suppressor T cell that then specifically suppressed the effect of the cytotoxic T cell against the homologous tumor. The suppressor T cell generated by STA had the same characteristics as those found in tumor-bearing animals: 1) The suppressor T cell has a very strict specificity against individual tumors; 2) The cell expresses cell surface determinants controlled by genes in the I-J subregion of the mouse H-2 complex. The activity of the cytotoxic T cell was completely inhibited by live tumor cells but not by STA, whereas that of the suppressor T cell was neutralized by STA. The results that cytotoxic and suppressor T cells are activated under different conditions, and that the antigenic determinants recognizable by these two cell types are not the same. The soluble extract contains only the determinants recognizable by the suppressor T cell, and the cytotoxic T cell can be activated only by the determinants associated with self antigen present on the surface of live tumor cells.  相似文献   

18.
Effects of Con A-induced human mononuclear cells on the proliferative response of peripheral T cells were examined by using TNP-modified autologous lymphocytes as stimulator cells. Cells induced by incubation with Con A contained both suppressor cells and amplifier cells. The former were induced from nylon wool-nonadherent T cells and these precursor cells were sensitive to mitomycin treatment. On the other hand, amplifier precursor cells were nylon wool-nonadherent T cells and were resistant to mitomycin treatment. Cell proliferation was required for the induction of suppressor cells but not for the induction of amplifier cells. Con A-induced suppressor effector cells were both nylon wool-adherent and nonadherent cells, on the contrary, Con A-induced amplifier effector cells were nonadherent cells. A small number of macrophages enhanced the suppressive activity of nonadherent T cells when added at the induction phase of suppressor T cells.  相似文献   

19.
Subcutaneous (s.c.) immunization of mice with allogeneic spleen cells can induce delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to both major and minor histocompatibility antigens. Intravenous immunization with allogeneic spleen cells, however, induces a poor state of DTH. Furthermore, i.v. immunization with allogeneic spleen cells, especially if they have been irradiated, induces suppressor T lymphocytes. These suppressor T cells are capable of suppressing the host-vs-graft (HvG) DTH reactivity that normally arises after s.c. immunization. Moreover, they can suppress the development of anti-host DTH effector T cells during graft-vs-host (GvH) reactions. These models for HvG and GvH DTH reactivity were used to study the influence of 2'-deoxyguanosine (dGuo) and guanosine (Guo) on the generation of DTH-reactive T cells and suppressor T cells in vivo. It was found that daily i.p. administration of 0.01 mg dGuo to mice immunized i.v. partially prevented the generation of suppressor T cell activity, whereas daily administration of 0.1 or 1 mg dGuo resulted in a complete abolition. Administration of dGuo has no effect on the anti-host DTH reactivity by spleen cells from nonsuppressed donors except for when a daily dose of 10 mg is administered. This dose proved to be toxic for precursors of DTH effector T cells. Daily i.p. injection of Guo had no effect on the generation of suppressor T cells nor on the generation of DTH effector T cells. The effect of dGuo was found to be due to a direct effect on suppressor T cells and not to the induction of contrasuppressor cells. These data suggest a differential sensitivity of DTH-reactive T cells and suppressor T cells for dGuo. Because suppressor T cells and DTH-reactive T cells require proliferation for expressing maximal functional activity in the systems used, both cell types probably have different enzyme activities involved in the purine metabolism and similar deoxycytidine kinase activities, but have different nucleotidase (5'NT) activities, those in suppressor T cells being the lowest. If so, suppressor T cells will accumulate deoxyguanosine triphosphate, which causes an inhibition of the ribonucleotide reductase activity and thus of the DNA synthesis by these cells.  相似文献   

20.
T cells from mice injected with picryl sulfonic acid have previously been shown to suppress the effector and possibly other phases of contact hypersensitivity reactions to picryl chloride. In this report we examine their effect on T cells helping the early direct anti-TNP plaque-forming cell response of mice painted with picryl chloride. They did not directly inhibit the activity of the helper cells but did inhibit the ability of mice to generate helper cells after skin painting. The suppressor cells were T cells as tested by passage through nylon wool columns and sensitivity to anti-θ serum. Viable syngeneic cells were required for suppression and their effect was specific. The suppressor cells could not be generated in adult thymectomized mice but could be produced in mice treated with high doses (200 mg/kg) of cyclophosphamide. These properties are distinct from those of suppressor T cells produced following immunization with picryl chloride but are the same as those of other suppressor cells induced by PSA which inhibit contact hypersensitivity.  相似文献   

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