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1.
Systemic graft-versus-host reactions (GVHR) were induced in F1 heterozygous mice by injecting 108 parental lymphocytes. The Anti-Thy 1.2-sensitive, T-cell mediated activation of macrophages was assessed by their increased capacity to destroy a facultative intracellular bacteriumListeria monocytogenes. The difference inMHC regions causing a GVHR that induced high levels of macrophage activation mapped toI-A. In contrast, differences atK orD, in any of the otherH-2 subregions or in the non-H-2 background, includingMls alone or in combination, did not induce a GVHR leading to macrophage activation, unless these differences were combined with a difference atI-A. The numbers of parental cells needed to activate macrophages via a GVHR caused byI-A vs. non-I-A differences, varied at least 30- to 100-fold. When parental cells were injected into F1 offspring of parents differing atI-J, growth ofListeria was enhanced significantly; this negative effect on macrophages was not seen when parental combinations differing atI-A alone were compared with those differing atI-A plusI-J orI-J plus otherH-2 regions.  相似文献   

2.
We previously screened a series of macrophage hybridomas derived from fusion of P388D1 (H-2d) tumor cells with CKB (H-2k) splenic adherent cells for their ability to induce I-J restricted Ts cell responses. One Ia+ macrophage clone (63) consistently induced Ag-specific, I-J-restricted Ts. To evaluate whether macrophage hybridoma 63 also induced delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) immunity, mice were immunized with hapten-coupled macrophage hybridoma cells. Hapten-coupled splenic adherent cells and control macrophage hybridomas induced significant primary DTH responses, whereas hapten-coupled macrophage 63 induced little or no immunity when injected into H-2 compatible hosts. However, macrophage hybridoma 63 specifically activated I-Ak, I-Ad, or I-Ed restricted T cell hybridomas/clones, in vitro in the presence of appropriate Ag. Three different strategies designed to eliminate suppressor cell activity were successfully used to demonstrate that hapten-coupled macrophage 63 could also induce in vivo immunity. First, after immunization with hapten-coupled macrophages, mice were treated with cyclophosphamide. Second, macrophage 63 was treated with anti-IJ idiotype antibody before 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl acetyl hapten (NP) coupling. Finally, haptenated macrophages were injected into I-A compatible but I-J incompatible recipients. These protocols are known to inhibit the induction of Ts activity, thus these results indirectly suggest that there is stimultaneous generation of Ts activity in vivo. The latter hypothesis was tested in adoptive transfer experiments. Transfer of lymph node cells from NP-63 primed B10.BR (H-2k) mice induced immunity in naive 4R animals, whereas the same number of immune cells suppressed NP-induced DTH responses in 5R mice. The combined results indicate that a cloned macrophage line can activate both Th and Ts cells. Macrophages which induce Ts activity may be responsible for maintaining the balance of immunity vs suppression. The data support the hypothesis that IJ interacting molecules (IJ-IM) expressed on macrophages are critical for induction of suppressor cell activity.  相似文献   

3.
Allogeneic effect factors (AEF) were produced across an I-J subregion incompatibility. The helper activity of these AEFs is H-2 restricted since they help B cells only of the stimulator haplotype and of other haplotypes that carry the same I-J subregion gene(s) as the stimulator haplotype. Immunoadsorption studies demonstrate that they consist of I-J determinants derived initially from the GVHR host and MLR stimulator cells and not the GVHR donor and MLR responder cells used to generate AEF. It is postulated that the genetic restriction of AEF helper activity is mediated in part by the ability of the GVHR activated donor T cells to acquire, in vivo, recipient T cell and/or macrophage derived I-J determinants. Cellular adsorption studies indicate that AEF helper activity may be adsorbed by B cells, but neither T cells nor macrophages, of the stimulator haplotype. The results suggest that an I-J-positive AEF interacts with an I-J subregion controlled complementary recognition structure on a target B cell and, after antigenic stimulation, activates that B cell to IgG antibody synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
The growth of a number of experimental rodent tumours including the Lewis lung tumour (LLca) progressively compromises the integrity of the host's gastroinestine by inducing cytokinetic alterations in the small bowel resembling those generally defining the intestinal phase of a graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR). To determine whether the induction of this paraneoplastic gastrointestine (PGI) involves, similar to a GVHR, a disparity between the MHC of the donor (LLca tumour) and the recipient (host), PGI development was evaluated in various LLca tumour-bearing murine strains that were either 'syngeneic' [C57BL/6 and BL/10 (H-2b)], 'semisyngeneic' [B6D2F1 (H-2bd) and B6C3F1 (H-2bk)] or 'allogeneic' [C3H/HeJ (H-2k) and DBA/2 (H-2d)] to the H-2b LLca tumour. The temporal appearance and magnitude of a PGI developing in either LLca-syngeneic or semi-syngeneic hosts, but not the allogeneic strains, suggested that the mechanism(s) involved in PGI development like the GVHR, was restricted by the MHC. Subsequent studies using congenic strains [B10.A (H-2k) and B10.D2/nSn (H-2d)], however, demonstrated that the mechanism(s) responsible for the PGI was restricted by the non-MHC loci of the C57BL mouse. These observations were supported by the appearance of a LLca-induced PGI in various B10.A congenic strains carrying mutations at the I-A or I-E/I-J loci of the MHC. Not unlike the intestinal phase of a GVHR, development of the PGI required the participation of enhanced mucosal mast cells which were limited in the WCB6F1 (S1/S1d) but not the (+/+) murine strains. These observations are discussed in light of the postulated premature migration of immature thymocytes that accompany tumour growth and their ability to non-specifically enhance (or suppress) cell mediated immune reactions in the host.  相似文献   

5.
It has been suggested that macrophage-like accessory cells are involved in suppressor T cell (Ts) induction. To further analyze this issue, we obtained several cloned macrophage hybridoma cell lines by somatic cell fusion of the macrophage tumor P388D1 of DBA/2 (H-2d) origin with splenic adherent cells of CKB mice (H-2k). Several cloned lines displayed the serological and functional characteristics of macrophages. We evaluated the ability of these hybridomas to induce third order or effector Ts (Ts3) to suppress the contact sensitivity response against the hapten 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenyl acetyl (NP). In contrast to the parental P388D1 and two other macrophage hybridomas, one macrophage hybridoma clone, termed 63, when conjugated with NP, induced Ts3, which suppressed contact sensitivity responses against NP but not DNFB, showing that the Ts3 were antigen specific. Macrophage hybridoma 63 could specifically induce Ts3 activity in either H-2k, H-2d, or H-2k/H-2d heterozygous hosts. Thus, macrophage hybridoma 63 functionally expressed major histocompatibility complex-related restricting determinants, and the fusion with cells from a H-2k macrophage donor caused a functional complementation of H-2d-related, Ts-inducing elements. The genetic restriction governing induction of Ts3 was controlled by genes that mapped to I-J region. Furthermore, NP-conjugated macrophage hybridoma 63 could serve as a target for elicitation of suppressor responses after administration of I-Jk, but not I-Jb, restricted suppressor factor. The data suggest that macrophage hybridomas represent a means to dissect heterogeneity within the macrophage population. The data also imply that the I-J determinants expressed on macrophages represent a ligand for the antigen receptor of Ts.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the effects of immune complexes on the expression of macrophage surface proteins in vitro. Increased expression of the H-2 molecules I-A, I-E, and K on the macrophage membrane was induced by in vitro culture with crude lymphokine or interferon-gamma. Expression of all three of the molecules was additionally increased by stimulating the cultures with heat-killed Listeria monocytogenes. Addition of soluble immune complexes to the cultures did not have any effect on macrophage expression of these proteins. However, significant inhibition of lymphokine or interferon-gamma induction of I-A, I-E, and H-2K was observed when macrophages were cultured on plates to which immune complexes had been bound. This inhibition was dose dependent, required an immunoglobulin (Ig) molecule with an intact Fc portion, did not require the presence of T cells, and occurred in the presence of indomethacin. Complexes containing IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, and IgE, but not IgM or IgA, antibodies mediated the inhibitory effect.  相似文献   

7.
Parental cells A injected into (A × B)F1 heterozygotes induce a graftversus-host reaction (GVHR) which induces systemic activation of anti-Listeria-bactericidal capacity of host macrophages. When donor lymphocytes differ from parent A with respect to various non-H-2 genetic markers, they may or may not be able to induce a GVHR. Some, but not all, known and some unknown non-H-2 differences can be assessed by this method within nine to 12 days. The method is described and some of the following non-H-2 differences are shown to influence GVHR-induced macrophage activation: male H-Y antigen, H-3 or H-4 (but not H-1 or H-9), and as yet underlined differences that apparently exist between mouse substrains of the same or similar designation, but obtained from different breeding establishments.Abbreviations used in this paper: H histocompatibility - GVHR graft-versus-host reaction - MHC major histocompatibility gene complex - SCRF Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation - J Jackson Laboratory - St Strong Foundation - Cum Cumberland View Farm - Ola Olac - Gh Dr. G. Haughton, Chapel Hill - Sal Dr. M. Cohn, La Jolla.  相似文献   

8.
The i.v. injection of parental T cells into F1 hybrid mice can result in a graft-vs-host (GVH)-induced immune deficiency that is Ag nonspecific and of long duration. The effect of the GVH reaction (GVHR) on the host's immune system depends on the class of F1 MHC Ag recognized by the donor cells. To determine the role of different subsets of donor-derived T cells in the induction of GVHR, donor spleen cells were negatively selected by anti-T cell mAb and C, and the cells were injected into F1 mice that differed from the donor by both class I and II MHC Ag or by class I or class II MHC only. The induction of GVHR across class I + II differences was found to require both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ parental cells. Induction of GVHR across a class II difference required only L3T4+ parental T cells in the combination tested [B6-into-(B6 x bm12)F1]. In contrast, B6 Lyt-2+ cells were sufficient to induce GVHR across a class I difference in (B6 x bm1)F1 recipients. In addition, a direct correlation was observed between the cell types required for GVH induction and the parental T cell phenotypes detected in the spleens of the GVH mice. The number of parental cells detected in the unirradiated F1 hosts was dependent upon the H-2 differences involved in the GVHR. Induction of a class I + class II GVHR resulted in abrogation of both TNP-self and allogeneic CTL responses. In contrast, induction of a class II GVHR resulted in only a selective loss of TNP-self but not of allogeneic CTL function. Unexpectedly, the induction of a class I GVHR also resulted in the selective loss of the TNP-self CTL response. Thus, these class I and class II examples of GVH both result in the selective abrogation of L3T4+ Th cell function. The data are discussed in terms of respective roles of killer cells and/or suppressor cells in the induction of host immune deficiency by a GVHR, and of the selective deficiency in host Th cell function induced by different classes of GVHR.  相似文献   

9.
The T suppressor efferent circuit in the picryl (TNP) system, which inhibits the passive transfer of contact sensitivity, involves at least two antigen-nonspecific factors. The second nonspecific T suppressor factor (ns-2) bears I-A determinants of both the alpha and the beta chain as shown by affinity chromatography on immobilized anti-I-A monoclonal antibodies. Sequential absorption shows that the determinants of the alpha and beta chain occur on the same molecular complex. No absorption was obtained with anti-I-E antibody. There are two genetic restrictions associated with ns-2--the first is in its release from the second T suppressor efferent cell (on exposure to antigen) and the second is in its inhibitory interaction with its target cell. Both are MHC restricted and matching in I-A (but not I-E, or I-J) is sufficient. The question was asked whether the I-A of the ns-2 was directly responsible for the I-A genetic restriction in its action. F1 TsF was made in (H-2k X H-2b)F1 mice by injecting picrylated parental cells intravenously and triggering the release of ns-2 with the corresponding picrylated parental cells. Both I-Ak- and I-Ab-positive ns-2 were produced and were separated by affinity chromatography on immobilized anti-I-A monoclonal antibody. The I-A phenotype of these separated ns-2 of F1 origin determines the genetic restriction in their action; i.e., I-Ak+ ns-2 only inhibits passive transfer by H-2k cells and I-Ab+ ns-2 only acts on H-2b cells. In contrast, the I-A haplotype of the picrylated cell used to induce the Ts cell which makes ns-2 is unimportant. It was concluded that the I-A on the ns-2, and not a possible recognition site for I-A, serves as a restriction element. This finding suggests that ns-2 may act directly on the I-A-restricted T cell which mediates contact sensitivity.  相似文献   

10.
A subpopulation of antigen-presenting macrophages required for an in vitro antibody response to burro erythrocytes was deleted by pretreating the splenic macrophages with anti-Ia serum and complement (C). The in vitro response of the macrophage depleted T-B cell population could not be restored by the addition of macrophages resistant to anti-Ia antibodies and C (Ia-). The response of Ia- macrophages and the macrophage-depleted T-B cells was only reconstituted by the addition of Ia+ macrophages. Macrophages pretreated with anti-Ia antibodies restricted to react with determinants of one I subregion could not support the in vitro antibody response when added to cultures whose macrophages were pretreated with anti-Ia serum and C specific for the I-J subregion. These results confirmed that Ia determinants of the I-A, the I-E, and the I-C subregions were all expressed on the I-J+ macrophage required for an in vitro antibody response.  相似文献   

11.
Expression of the I-E target antigen for T-cell killing requires two genes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The H-2Ik region encodes at least two different target antigens for unrestricted T-cell mediated killing. The first is controlled by the I-A region alone and the second depends on a pair of alleles, one located to the left of I-B (presumably in I-A) and the other to the right of I-J (presumably in I-E). Hence, effector cells nominally specific for a product of the I-E region do not kill target cells with the same I-E region as the stimulator unless the I-A region is also shared. Some effectors specific for H-2Ik, such as A.TH anti-A.TL and B10.A(4R) anti-B10.A(2R), cross-react with B10.A(3R) and B10.A(5R) target cells. A product of the H-2b haplotype was shown to complement products of the H-2d or H-2k haplotypes in forming this cross-reactive determinant. The results are consistent with recent biochemical data on the component chains of Ia antigens.  相似文献   

12.
Macrophage cells play a central role during infection with Listeria monocytogenes by both providing a major habitat for bacterial multiplication and presenting bacterial antigens to the immune system. In this study, we investigated the influence of L. monocytogenes infection on the expression of MHC class I and class II genes in two murine macrophage cell lines. Steady-state levels of I-Aβ chain mRNA were decreased in both resting J774A.1 and P388D1 macrophages infected with L. monocytogenes whereas reduction of H-2K mRNA was only observed in P388D1 cells. In addition, L. monocytogenes suppressed induction of MHC class I and class II mRNAs in response to γ-interferon as well as the maintenance of the induced state in activated P388D1 macrophages. Exposure to the non-pathogenic species L. innocua or a deletion mutant of L. monocytogenes, which lacks the lecithinase operon, did not cause a reduction in H-2K and I-Aβ mRNA levels nor suppress expression of Ia antigens. Inhibition of MHC gene expression may represent an important part of the cross-talk between L. monocytogenes and the macrophage that probably influences the efficiency of a T cell-mediated immune response and thus the outcome of a listerial infection.  相似文献   

13.
In vivo adoptive transfer of T-cell-mediated immunity to the facultative intracellular bacterium Listeria monocytogenes is restricted, not only by the H-2 haplotype of the mice, but also by incompatibilities at non-H-2 loci. Thus, transfer between H-2 identical strains of mice with different background genes was reproducibly and significantly less efficient than transfer between completely syngeneic mice, although the restriction was less marked than that across the H-2 barrier. Restriction also occurred when parental cells were injected into semisyngeneic F1 hybrids and when cells from F1 hybrids were injected into parental strains. Using congenic strains of mice differing only at defined minor histocompatibility antigens, it was found that, of those loci available for study, antigens arising from the H-4 and H-8 loci strongly restricted transfer, whereas those specified by H-1, H-3, and H-7 did not.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract The growth of a number of experimental rodent tumours including the Lewis lung tumour (LLca) progressively compromises the integrity of the host's gastrointestine by inducing cytokinetic alterations in the small bowel resembling those generally defining the intestinal phase of a graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR). To determine whether the induction of this paraneoplastic gastrointestine (PGI) involves, similar to a GVHR, a disparity between the MHC of the donor (LLca tumour) and the recipient (host), PGI development was evaluated in various LLca tumour-bearing murine strains that were either ‘syngeneic’[C57BL/6 and BL/10 (H-2b)], ‘semisyngeneic’[B6D2F1 (H-2bd) and B6C3F1 (H-2bk)] or ‘allogeneic’[C3H/HeJ (H-2k) and DBA/2 (H-2d)] to the H-2b LLca tumour. The temporal appearance and magnitude of a PGI developing in either LLca-syngeneic or semi-syngeneic hosts, but not the allogeneic strains, suggested that the mechanism(s) involved in PGI development, like the GVHR, was restricted by the MHC. Subsequent studies using congenic strains [B10.A (H-2k) and B10.D2/nSn (H-2d)], however, demonstrated that the mechanism(s) responsible for the PGI was restricted by the non-MHC loci of the C57BL mouse. These observations were supported by the appearance of a LLca-induced PGI in various B10.A congenic strains carrying mutations at the I-A or I-E/I-J loci of the MHC. Not unlike the intestinal phase of a GVHR, development of the PGI required the participation of enhanced mucosal mast cells which were limited in the WCB6F1 (S1/S1d) but not the (+/+) murine strains. These observations are discussed in light of the postulated premature migration of immature thymocytes that accompany tumour growth and their ability to non-specifically enhance (or suppress) cell mediated immune reactions in the host.  相似文献   

15.
This study reports on the in vitro interactions between T cells from Listeria-immunized mice, macrophages from normal mice, and heat-killed Listeria organisms. This interaction was assayed either by determing the amount of thymocyte mitogen in culture fluids after 24 hr, or by estimating the degree of T cell proliferation after 96 hr. Each assay depended on critical concentrations of macrophages, T cells, and heat-killed Listeria, points that were evaluated in a number of experiments. Both assays required specific Listeria-immune T cells. For an effective interaction, the T cells and the macrophages had to share the I-A region of the H-2 gene complex. Macrophages bearing Ia, which represented a minor population of macrophages, were essential for the proliferative response to macrophage-associated Listeria. Also, Ia-bearing macrophages were an important component in the interactions leading to increased secretion of mitogen. The immunogenic moiety associated with Listeria was short-lived, disappearing 24 hr after uptake of Listeria by macrophages. The interactions were not blocked by anti-Listeria antibodies but were partially sensitive to trypsinization.  相似文献   

16.
The induction of new suppressor T cells (Ts2) by suppressive extracts (TsF) from L-glutamic acid50L-tyrosine50 (GT) nonresponder mice was examined. Incubation of normal spleen cells with allogeneic GT-TsF for 2 days in vitro led to the generation of Ts2 cells able to suppress subsequent responses to the immunogen GT-methylated bovine serum albumin (GT-MBSA) in vivo. This induction occurred efficiently when TsF donor and target cells differed at all of H-2, including the I-J subregion. B10.BR (H-2k) GT-TsF, adsorbed on, then acid eluted from GT-Sepharose and anti-I-Jk [B10.A (3R) anti-B10.A (5R)]-Sepharose in a sequential fashion could induce BALB/c (H-2d) spleen cells to become Ts2 only if nanogram quantities of GT were added to the purified GT-TsF. This indicates a requirement for a molecule or molecular complex possessing both I-J determinants and antigen (GT)-binding specificity, together with GT itself, for Ts2 induction. The induced Ts2 are I-J+, since their function can be eliminated by treatment with anti-I-Jk plus C. These I-J determinants are coded for by the precursor of the Ts2 and do not represent passively adsorbed, I-J coded TsF, since anti-Ijk antiserum [(3R X DBA/2)F1 anti-5R] which cannot recognize the BALB/c (I-Jd) TsF used for induction still eliminates the activity of induced A/J (I-Jk) Ts2. These data provide further evidence for and information about the minimum of two T cells involved in antigen-specific suppressor T cell systems.  相似文献   

17.
Experiments were performed to analyze the modulation of macrophage Ia expression and biosynthesis by Salmonella minnesota-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in vivo. The i.p. injection of LPS into LPS-responder mice caused a dramatic increase in the Ia expression of the peritoneal macrophage population harvested 1 wk after injection. As little as 1 ng of lipid-rich Re595 LPS per mouse caused a significant I-Ak increase, and 1 microgram was optimal; wild-type S. minnesota LPS was less active. No I-Ak induction by LPS was observed in the LPS-nonresponder strain C3H/HeJ. LPS-induced macrophages showed a 6- to 16-fold increase in I-Ak expression by radioimmunoassay (RIA), a 3- to 10-fold increase in the proportion of I-Ak-positive cells, and a 10- to 15-fold increase in I-Ak biosynthetic capacity. The magnitude of this induction by LPS was comparable to increases observed after injection of live Listeria monocytogenes. The kinetics of I-Ak induction by LPS and by L. monocytogenes were different: LPS caused an initial decrease in I-Ak expression 1 day after injection, and I-Ak induction by LPS occurred more slowly and maintained heightened expression longer. Several H-2 gene products (H-2Kk, I-Ak, and I-Ek) were augmented in LPS-induced macrophages. In keeping with increased I-A and I-E expression, LPS-induced macrophages were more effective than normal macrophages in presenting antigen to T lymphocytes. We suggest that the modulation of macrophage Ia expression is one important mechanism contributing to the immunoregulatory activity of LPS.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of a variety of soluble factors, alone or in combination, to endow murine resident peritoneal macrophages with listericidal activity was assessed. Inhibition of growth and (or) killing of Listeria in infected macrophages was determined by the uptake of [3H]uracil following lysis of the infected macrophage monolayers. Interferon-gamma was shown to induce modest listericidal activity in murine resident macrophages as compared with untreated monolayers. Treatment with tumour necrosis factor alpha also induced significant listericidal activity in this system. Among other cytokines tested, IL-4 induced an ability to inhibit growth of Listeria in resident macrophages. The ability of cytokines tested, IL-4 induced an ability to inhibit growth of Listeria in resident macrophages. The ability of cytokines to act in an additive or synergistic fashion with IFN-gamma was also investigated. Combinations of IFN-gamma and IL-4 and IFN-gamma and IL-2 induced listericidal activity not greater than that seen with IFN-gamma alone. IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha were shown to increase bactericidal activity in an additive fashion. However, elicited macrophages were shown to spontaneously exert a significant listericidal activity that was not enhanced by cytokine treatment. Collectively, these findings show that cytokine treatment induced rather modest enhancement in listericidal activity in murine resident peritoneal macrophages and no enhancement whatsoever in elicited macrophages. Thus, in in vivo situations where Listeria organisms are completely cleared from the infected organs, mechanisms other than lymphokine-induced listericidal activity of resident macrophages would seem to be operating.  相似文献   

19.
The activation of T lymphocytes for immunity to the intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes requires that Ia-positive macrophages ingest the bacteria. The subsequent handling of Listeria by macrophages was examined in this report and related to antigen presentation to T cells. Macrophages pulsed with radiolabeled Listeria, besides releasing acid-soluble radioactivity--an indication of extensive catabolism of the Listeria-derived proteins--were also found to release acid-insoluble peptides. The rate of release of the peptides was not markedly affected by treatment with chloroquine, ammonia, or monensin and was independent of the state of activation and the level of Ia expression of the macrophage. The peptides were not associated with fragments of membranes and were represented by several molecular species. Listeria-derived peptides were also found associated with the macrophage plasma membrane. The membrane-associated peptides behaved like integral membrane proteins and could be released by proteases or detergents. Their expression was independent of the dose of Listeria and the level of Ia expression of the macrophage, and their presence could not be inhibited by protease inhibitors or chloroquine. The Listeria peptides released by the macrophages were very weakly immunogenic in a T cell proliferation assay. Purified plasma membranes from Listeria-pulsed macrophages, which contained membrane-associated Listeria peptides, were not immunogenic by themselves but could be reprocessed by additional macrophages to subsequently stimulate T cells. Trypsin treatment of Listeria-pulsed macrophages did not cause a significant reduction in their ability to stimulate T cells. No association was found between Ia molecules and either the membrane-associated or the released peptides with the use of several technical approaches. Hence, after internalization of Listeria, potentially immunogenic material can be found at the cell surface as well as in the culture fluid. The release of soluble peptides is a clear indication that proteins can be recycled after their internalization in vesicles.  相似文献   

20.
Immune responses to GAT are controlled by H-2-linked Ir genes; soluble GAT stimulates antibody responses in responder mice (H-2b) but not in nonresponder mice (H-2q). In nonresponder mice, soluble GAT stimulates suppressor T cells that preempt function of helper T cells. After immunization with soluble GAT, spleen cells from (responder x nonresponder: H-2b X H-2q)F1 mice develop antibody responses to responder H-2b GAT-M phi but not to nonresponder H-2q GAT-M phi. This failure of immune F1 spleen cells to respond is due to an active suppressor T cell mechanism that is activated by H-2q, but not H-2b, GAT-M phi and involves two regulatory T cell subsets. Suppressor-inducer T cells are immune radiosensitive Lyt-1 +2-, I-A-, I-J+, Qa-1+ cells. Suppressor-effector T cells can be derived from virgin or immune spleens and are radiosensitive Lyt-1-2+, I-A-, I-J+, Qa-1+ cells. This suppressor mechanism can suppress responses of virgin or immune F1 helper T cells and B cells. Helper T cells specific for H-2b GAT-M phi are easily detected in F1 mice after immunization with soluble GAT; helper T cells specific for H-2q GAT-M phi are demonstrated after elimination of the suppressor-inducer and -effector cells. These helper T cells are radioresistant Lyt-1+2-, I-A+, I-J-, Qa-1- cells. These data indicate that the Ir gene defect in responses to GAT is not due to a failure of nonresponder M phi to present GAT and most likely is not due to a defective T cell repertoire, because the relevant helper T cells are primed in F1 mice by soluble GAT and can be demonstrated when suppressor cells are removed. These data are discussed in the context of mechanisms for expression of Ir gene function in responses to GAT, especially the balance between stimulation of helper vs suppressor T cells.  相似文献   

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