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1.
Considerable disagreement exists among immunologists regarding the polymorphic nature of the murine Mls system. An estimate of the capacity of a given putative Mls allelic gene product expressed on a stimulator population to elicit proliferation of H-2-compatible Mls-disparate unprimed T cells may vary widely among different groups of investigators. This laboratory has shown previously that preactivation of B lymphocytes in a splenocyte stimulator population by exposure to goat anti-mouse IgD (GaMD) before irradiation dramatically enhanced the in vitro presentation not only of the strongly stimulatory (and highly cross-reactive) Mlsa and Mlsd, but also the more poorly stimulatory Mlsc specificity. Therefore, by the use of GaMD-treated splenocytes that optimally present the various Mls non-H-2 stimulatory epitopes, we attempted in this study to obtain a clearer understanding of Mls polymorphism by re-examining the conflicting claims associated with the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) stimulatory capacity of different Mls specificities. Among H-2k responder cells of the Mls null, Mlsa, Mlsb, or Mlsd genotypes, only T cells from Mlsd-bearing CBA/J mice did not respond to Mlsc determinants present on GaMD-treated C3H/HeJ stimulator cells. Crossing CBA/J with an Mlsc-responsive mouse strain yielded an F1 animal in which nonresponsiveness to Mlsc was dominant. Although Mlsa (AKR/J) and Mlsc (C3H/HeJ) parental T cells both proliferated vigorously to Mlsd (CBA/J) stimulator cells, the Mlsa/c (AKR X C3H)F1 T cells responded poorly to GaMD-treated Mlsd stimulator cells. In addition, Mlsd (CBA/J) T cells were nonresponsive to Mlsa (AKR/J), Mlsc (C3H/HeJ), and Mlsa/c (AKR X C3H)F1 GaMD-treated stimulator cells. Because Mlsa (AKR/J) and Mlsc (C3H/HeJ) specificities are mutually stimulatory, at least limited polymorphism must exist in the Mls system. However, because Mlsa/c (AKR X C3H) and Mlsd (CBA/J) specificities are mutually nonstimulatory, T cell proliferation in an Mlsd-defined primary MLR is most likely due to a composite response to Mlsa and Mlsc epitopes present on CBA/J stimulator cells.  相似文献   

2.
The determinants encoded by the minor lymphocyte stimulating locus (Mls) are defined as determinants that induce strong T cell proliferative responses in primary mixed lymphocyte reactions. Although the Mls locus was originally described as having four alleles, a, b, c, and d, a number of recent observations have led several investigators to challenge the idea that Mls is truly a polymorphic system. To better define this system of determinants recognized at high frequency by T cells, the present studies were undertaken to evaluate the polymorphism of Mls products. In the present study, the in vitro proliferative responses of Mlsa- and Mlsc-specific T cell clones were employed to analyze Mls products. The identification of determinants recognized by Mlsa- and Mlsc-reactive clones was established by the pattern of responses to stimulators derived from congenic strains, recombinant inbred strains, and backcross mice. T cell clones and unprimed T cells gave concordant responses that confirmed the Mlsa or Mlsc specificity of the cloned populations. With the use of these two sets of Mls-specific T cell clones, the existence or absence of polymorphism of Mls-encoded gene products was examined. It was found that Mlsa-specific cloned T cells responded to Mlsa but not Mlsc stimulators, whereas Mlsc-specific clones responded to Mlsc but not Mlsa. This reciprocal pattern of specificity indicates that the Mls system as currently defined is therefore truly polymorphic. In addition, it was observed that both Mlsa- and Mlsc-specific clones were stimulated by Mlsd stimulators. In particular, the possibility that Mlsa and Mlsc are not alleles but products of different loci and that Mlsd strains are those that express both Mlsa and Mlsc is considered.  相似文献   

3.
The activation of BALB/c lymphocytes in the mixed lymphocyte reaction to Mls-disparate APC has been shown to encompass up to 20% of the mature resting helper T lymphocyte population. In addition to these overtly Mls-responsive cells, our studies have revealed a second population that respond to the Mls difference of DBA/2 spleen cells in conjunction with the mitogen Con A. This part of the Mls response is therefore latent. As mitogen and Mls-stimulating effect act in synergy, it is likely that both stimuli act on the same cell, and hence the Mls effect can be regarded as a regulatory interaction between APC and Th cell. By use of congenic BALB.Mlsa mice, the regulatory effect has been mapped to the Mls locus. The regulatory influence has also been demonstrated in DBA/2 Th cells (Mlsa) stimulated simultaneously with mitogen and Mls-disparate (Mlsb) APC, consistently causing inhibition of mitogen-induced proliferation in this reverse Mls direction. This antagonistic effect has also been linked to the Mls locus. We conclude that the Mls reaction governed by the a and b alleles is bidirectional, producing synergy with class II-dependent activation signals in the direction of Mlsa----Mlsb, and antagonism in the direction Mlsb----Mlsa. Both the classical Mls and the reverse Mls effects have been demonstrated at the clonal level. These results are in accord with the previously proposed hypothesis that the Mls molecule serves as a down-regulatory stimulus in the activation of Th cells. Mls responses of Mlsb T cells are explained as the consequence of a diminished down-regulation by Mlsa APC. Conversely, the reverse Mls response described here can be considered a consequence of inordinately high down-regulation of the Mlsa T cell responses by Mlsb APC.  相似文献   

4.
To gain insight into the nature of Mls determinants, we examined the stimulator cells responsible for the activation of inducer T cell clones by Mls determinants. Two types of clones responding to Mls determinants were identified. One type responded to purified B cells, but not to splenic adherent cells (SAC), from mice bearing Mls stimulatory determinants. The other type of Mls-reactive T cell clone, including the representative clone Ly1-N5, demonstrated a vigorous response to unfractionated spleen cells, but showed little or no response to B cells alone or to SAC alone from mice bearing the Mlsa or Mlsd stimulatory determinant. The response of these clones to Mls determinants required stimulation by two cell types. The failure of clone Ly1-N5 to respond to Mlsa-bearing B cells was reversed by the addition of SAC taken from mice bearing the Mlsa allele. In addition, SAC from mice bearing the nonstimulatory Mlsb allele could synergize with B cells from Mlsa-bearing animals. B cells were required to provide the Mlsa determinant, because the combination of Mlsa-bearing SAC and Mlsb-bearing B cells did not activate the clone. The response of clone Ly1-N5 to Mls is restricted by Ia determinants (shared by H-2b, H-2d, and H-2k haplotypes but not by the H-2q haplotype). The permissive H-2 alleles can be present either on the stimulator B cell or on the SAC. The optimal response of the clone was obtained by using B cells bearing Mlsa and the permissive Ia epitopes. However, a significant response of the clone to B cells bearing Mlsa but an inappropriate Ia (Iaq) was also seen in the presence of SAC bearing the nonstimulatory Mlsb allele but the permissive Ia epitopes.  相似文献   

5.
Specific neonatally induced tolerance to Mls locus determinants   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Neonatal injection of CBA/HT6T6 (H-2k, Mlsb) mice with adult, Mls-incompatible (CBA/J [H-2k, Mlsd] X CBA/HT6T6)F1 spleen cells results in the abrogation of cell proliferation and interleukin 2 (IL 2) production in bulk mixed lymphocyte cultures, when spleen cells from the inoculated mice are tested at 6 to 8 wk of age with stimulator cells expressing the Mlsd of the tolerizing inoculum. In limiting dilution assays, this tolerant state was manifested in a 25- to 550-fold (280-fold average) decrease in the frequency of precursors of Mlsd-responsive IL 2-producing T cells. Tolerance was specific in that the frequencies of precursors of IL 2-producing cells responding to Con A, allogeneic H-2d, and self-Ia were not affected. The observed low frequency of Mls-responsive cells was due neither to extensive chimerism resulting in the dilution of Mlsd-responsive cells by the nonresponsive F1 cells of the inoculum, nor to the action of suppressor cells. These findings indicate that neonatal injection of Mls-incompatible spleen cells produces a state of specific tolerance by a clonal deletion or inactivation mechanism. This specific tolerance supports the view that 1) the Mls locus encodes or regulates the expression of defined alloantigenic determinants and 2) Mls-incompatible responder mice have specific receptors for Mls determinants on clonally distributed IL 2-producing responder T cells.  相似文献   

6.
Neonatal tolerance inducibility of self-major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-class II-associated antigens was compared with that of allo-class II antigens. BALB/c (H-2d, Mlsb) mice, less than 24 hr after birth, were intravenously injected with bone marrow cells of either (BALB/c X DBA/2)F1 (H-2d, Mlsb/a, semiallogeneic at the Mls locus) or (BALB/c X B10.BR)F1 (H-2d/k, Mlsb; semiallogeneic at the MHC), as antigens. The mice were tested for in vivo immune activity of class II-reactive T cells by means of the popliteal lymph node-swelling assay. They developed tolerance, irrespective of type of antigens, showing profoundly suppressed host-versus-graft reaction, and those tolerized to the allo-MHC antigens accepted skin grafts of the corresponding allogeneic mice. In the thymus and spleen of the Mls-tolerant mice, antigen-specific class II-reactive T-cell activity was completely abolished, without the apparent involvement of suppressor cells. In contrast, the activity in allo-MHC-tolerant mice was not reduced in either thymus or peripheral lymphoid organs, suggesting that systemic hyporesponsiveness is attributable to reversible suppression of immune competent cells. The resistance for cell-level tolerance induction to allo-class II antigens may not be ascribed to the active participation of allo-MHC antigens in prevention of or in escape from tolerance induction or both, since an injection of bone marrow cells of both Mls and H-2-semiallogeneic (DBA/2 X B10.BR)F1 (H-2d/k, Mlsa/b) mice could induce tolerance to Mlsa-H-2d antigens in newborn thymus cells.  相似文献   

7.
In the mouse, two sets of V beta gene products have been shown to be associated with T cell recognition of endogenous self Ag. One of these is the set of V beta associated with T cell reactivities to stimulatory Mls gene products, Mlsa (V beta 6, V beta 8.1, V beta 9) or Mlsc (V beta 3); another is the set of V beta, such as V beta 5, V beta 11, V beta 12, or V beta 17a, which were originally found to be related to I-E recognition. Although the Mls system has been well characterized, little is known about the nature of the ligands for the second set of V beta. In this work, we describe the evidence that the natural ligand or ligands of V beta 5, V beta 11, and V beta 12 may be novel Mls determinants that are recognized by naive T cells at a high precursor frequency and function as the ligand for clonal deletion of self-reactive T cells by negative selection. However, surprisingly, unlike the conventional Mls system, in which all V beta associated with Mlsa recognition or Mlsc recognition are uniformly deleted in those animals expressing the relevant Mls type, expression of these three V beta segregates independently among strains. Based on these observations, the nature of T cell recognition for this new Mls gene product(s) is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Specificity of anti-Mlsa tolerance induced in BALB/c (H-2d, Mlsb) neonates was investigated by a popliteal lymph node (PLN)-swelling assay for the local graft-versus-host (GVH) reaction by injecting tolerant thymus cells into the footpads of several types of F1 hybrid mice. When thymus cells were obtained from 1-week-old normal BALB/c, they evoked enlargement of PLNs of (BALB/c X DBA/2)F1 (H-2d, Mlsb/a) [CDF1] recipients and of other hybrid recipients, heterozygous in Mlsa,c,d alleles, irrespective of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotypes. The same thymus cells did not cause the response in MHC-heterozygous F1 hybrids when the hybrids were homozygous in Mlsb, identical with BALB/c mice. Therefore, the PLN response to Mls antigens, known to be closely associated with MHC-class II antigens, was not directed to the class II antigens themselves. This enabled us to examine the effects of MHC on tolerance induction to the Mls antigens. When BALB/c neonates were injected with CDF1 bone marrow cells, complete tolerance to Mlsa-H-2d antigens of CDF1 cells was induced in the thymus, while responsiveness to Mlsa antigens in the context of H-2k and H-2b antigens, was not affected. This indicates MHC-restriction of neonatal tolerance to Mls antigens. Furthermore, when Mls and H-2-heterozygous (BALB/c X AKR)F1 (H-2d/k, Mlsb/a) bone marrow cells served as the tolerogen, thymus cells of BALB/c neonates were also tolerized to Mlsa-H-2k antigens as well as to Mlsa-H-2d antigens, which suggests the involvement of MHC, probably class II antigens of tolerance-inducing cells.  相似文献   

9.
A comparison of splenic cells from various inbred rat strains indicated that DA, Lewis, Buffalo, August, Wistar Furth, and (LEW X BN)F1 all responded well to the Mycoplasma arthritidis T cell mitogen, phytohemagglutinin and concanavalin A, but cells from BN and MAXX rats were very weakly or nonresponsive. Cells from congenic strains expressing nonresponder background genes, and responder haplotypes at RT1 (BN.1L(LEW), RT1; BN.1A(DA), RT1av1) failed to respond significantly to the mitogens. Rats expressing responder background genes but the nonresponder haplotype at RT1 at RT1 (WF.1N-(MAXX), RT1n) exhibited high responses to all mitogens. The controlling role of non-RT1 genes was confirmed by testing tissue-typed (DA X BN)F2 progeny and (DA X BN)F1 X DA and (DA X BN)F1 X BN progeny. No association was seen between the expression of a/a, a/n, or n/n at RT1 and the degree of response to the mitogens. In contrast, as the proportion of DA non-RT1 genes increased, so did the degree of mitogenic responsiveness. Similar results were obtained by using a partially purified preparation of the mycoplasma T cell mitogen. The results indicated that in the (DA X BN)F1 hybrids, responsiveness to all mitogens was recessive: this contrasts with the (LEW X BN)F1 hybrids in which responsiveness was dominant. Finally, we showed that both responder and nonresponder splenic cells were capable of binding the M. arthritidis mitogen. The data contrast with those obtained with nonresponder mouse strains the cells of which failed to bind mitogen due to the absence of the E alpha chain of the I-E-coded molecule.  相似文献   

10.
Analysis of the capacity of splenocytes from non-prototypic Mlsa or Mlsc mouse strains to stimulate allogeneic H-2k-compatible T cells in a primary Mls-defined MLR provided interesting examples of exceptions to the usually stated characterization of Mlsa and Mlsc determinants as highly stimulatory of weakly stimulatory, respectively. Across the Mlsa barrier, MA/My stimulator cells had a significantly reduced capacity to elicit responder proliferation in comparison with prototypic AKR/J or less well studied C58/J, CE/J, or RF/J splenocytes. Across the Mlsc barrier, a gradient of stimulatory ability was observed with RF/J splenocytes being virtually nonstimulatory, prototypic C3H/HeJ splenocytes having an intermediate capacity, and CE/J and C58/J being highly stimulatory presenters of this non-MHC specificity. The differing capacity of each of these H-2k stimulator cells to elicit unprimed responder cell proliferation across an Mlsa or Mlsc difference correlated with the T cell growth factor activity that was secreted into the MLR supernatants. The super stimulatory form of Mlsc was expressed in an autosomal dominant fashion by (Mlsc poorly stimulatory x Mlsc super-stimulatory)F1 animals, (BALB.K x C58/J)F1 or (RF/J x CE/J)F1. The segregation of Mlsc stimulatory ability among first backcross and F2 animals derived from the former F1 was compatible with a single non-MHC gene controlling the expression and presentation of the super-stimulatory form of Mlsc. The regulatory nature of this gene was indicated by the observation that F1 animals generated from the Mlsc nonprototypic and poorly stimulatory BALB/c parental strain were self-tolerant to the super-stimulatory form of Mlsc. The existence of an Mls specificity other than a and c was suggested by positive non-MHC MLR responses in certain responder/stimulator cell combinations of Mls prototypic and nonprototypic mouse strains.  相似文献   

11.
Cell-free supernatants from broth cultures of Mycoplasma arthritidis (MAS) induce vigorous proliferative responses in thymus-derived T lymphocytes from H2k or H2d strains of mice. Populations of lymphoid cells from mice of H2b, H2q, or H2s haplotypes do not respond to this stimulus. Previous studies with lymphoid cells from congenic and recombinant strains of mice indicate that the T cell proliferative response induced by MAS is controlled by a gene(s) that maps to the I-E/C subregion of the murine major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The T cell proliferative response induced by MAS is dependent upon the presence of a population of la+, radioresistant accessory cells (AC). Data presented here demonstrates that responder strain AC that have been pulsed with MAS (followed by extensive washing) induced vigorous proliferative responses in subsequently added T cell populations. Pulsing of T cells with MAS, followed by the addition of AC, however, did not result in T cell proliferation. MAS was found to stimulate (responder X nonresponder) F1 T cells to proliferate if the MAS was presented in the context of either responder or (responder X nonresponder) F1 AC; nonresponder strain AC were ineffective in this regard. Nonresponder strain T cells were found to be capable of responding to MAS if it was presented in the context of responder strain AC, even if the T cells and AC were completely allogeneic. Thus, nonresponder strain T cells mounted vigorous proliferative responses if the MAS was presented in the context of responder strain AC. Conversely, responder strain T cells did not respond to MAS presented in the context of nonresponder strain AC. In addition, lymphoid cells from a B10 leads to B6AF1 radiation bone marrow chimera were also found to be capable of responding to MAS, but only in the presence of AC that expressed cell surface determinants controlled by the I-E/C subregion. The data presented here indicate that MAS-induced T cell proliferative responses are controlled at the level of the AC by a gene(s) that maps to the I-E/C subregion of the MHC.  相似文献   

12.
B10.AKM mice (H-2M) when immunized with H-2k cells showed very low cytotoxic antibody responses to the H-2Dk private specificity H-2.32, whereas AKR.M and (AKR.M X B10.AKM)F1 mice that possess the same H-2m haplotype mounted reasonable anti-H-2.32 antibody responses. The genetic nature of the non-H-2 linked gene(s) controlling the anti-H-2.32 response was analyzed on the backcross progeny raised between (AKR.M X B10.AKM)F1 and B10.AKM mice. The anti-H-2.32 antibody response was found to be predominantly controlled by a single locus. This locus segregated independently of the Ig heavy chain locus, the Ly2 locus, and the Mls locus. Despite the observed difference in antibody production, no significant differences between AKR.M and B10.AKM mice were detected in induction of H-2Dk-specific killer T cells. Thus, the defect in the response of B10.AKM mice to H-2.32 can be detected at the level of B cell function and is controlled by a single non-H-2-linked genetic locus, but is not attributable to genes linked to the major immunoglobulin structural genes nor to the Mls locus.  相似文献   

13.
The Mls locus was originally defined to have four alleles; all controlled products that were detectable in MLR except b, which was described as being null. More recent evidence led other investigators to postulate that the Mls locus is nonpolymorphic, being composed of only the b null allele and a singly expressed allele previously ascribed to be the a and d alleles. Our results indicate that Mlsa and Mlsd control products that are antigenically distinct and, therefore, the products cannot be controlled by the same allele. In addition, the product of Mlsb was easily detectable by Mlsa and Mlsd responding cells and cannot be considered null. Alternative explanations are considered for these conflicting results.  相似文献   

14.
T cell recognition of Mlsc,x determinants   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Among a large number of cow insulin-specific T cell clones derived from both C57BL/10 and B10.A strains, several were found to react to non-MHC-linked gene products of a number of allogeneic strains. The stimulatory moiety for three of these clones correlates, in part, with expression of Mlsc, as defined by mouse strains C3H/HeJ and A/J. In addition, all three of these clones are stimulated by cells from strain PL/J, which has the poorly defined Mlsx allele. The data strongly suggest that Mlsx may, in fact, be Mlsc or is, at least, highly cross-reactive with Mlsc. Segregation analysis by using (B10.D2 X PL/J)F2 mice demonstrates that the Mlsx gene is genetically independent of the Mlsa linked Ly-9 marker on chromosome 1. Further studies with the use of these Mlsc,x-reactive clones reveal that they also recognize a gene product present in many mouse strains including DBA/2 which were previously phenotyped as Mlsa. However, testing of BxD recombinant inbred lines excludes Mlsa as being the stimulatory moiety. We therefore propose reclassification of the Mls phenotypes of several mouse strains based upon a two-locus model for Mls.  相似文献   

15.
Immunization of mice with the ABA-GAT conjugate stimulates GAT-specific T helper cells in GAT-responder animals and ABA-specific helpers in nonresponders. Unexpectedly, immunization of (responder X nonresponder) F1 mice, which have the GAT-responder phenotype, leads to the recruitment of both ABA- and GAT-specific clones of T helper lymphocytes. The GAT-reactive population is restricted to the haplotype of the responder parent (Iak), whereas ABA-specific T cells are mostly restricted to the nonresponder one (Ias). This is demonstrated by the ability of monoclonal antibodies to parental la antigens to inhibit T cell proliferation to GAT or ABA-Tyr in vitro. Consistently, ABA-GAT-primed F1 T cells can only activate nonresponder B cells to proliferate in the presence of ABA-Tyr and responder B lymphocytes in the presence of GAT. Furthermore, F1 T cells seem to recognize both ABA and GAT epitopes only in association with molecules encoded by the I-A subregion. Analysis of ABA-specific F1 T cell lines generated by in vitro stimulation with ABA-Tyr or ABA-GAT demonstrates a competition between GAT- and ABA-specific T cells present in the hybrid T cell repertoire and restricted to the same parental I-Ak molecule. The results indicate that F1 macrophages can present both ABA and GAT epitopes to T cells in association with the two parental and hybrid Ia determinants. It seems unlikely that the absence of GAT-specific T cells restricted to the nonresponder I-A in the F1 is due to suppressor T cells. Thus, the competition model that we propose, to explain the selective F1 T cell response to ABA-GAT, leads us to believe that GAT nonresponder animals may lack clones capable of recognizing, with a high affinity, I-As + GAT.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
We previously demonstrated that in vivo antibody production to HBsAg in the mouse is regulated by at least two immune response (Ir) genes mapping in the I-A (HBs-Ir-1) and I-C (HBs-Ir-2) subregions of the H-2 locus. To confirm that H-2-linked Ir genes regulate the immune response to HBsAg at the T cell level and to determine if the same Ir genes function in T cell activation as in B cell activation, the HBsAg-specific T cell responses of H-2 congenic and intra-H-2 recombinant strains were analyzed. HBsAg-specific T cell proliferation, IL 2 production, and the surface marker phenotype of the proliferating T cells were evaluated. Additionally, T cell-antigen-presenting cell (APC) interactions were examined with respect to genetic restriction and the role of Ia molecules in HBsAg presentation. The HBsAg-specific T cell proliferative responses of H-2 congenic and intra-H-2 recombinant strains generally paralleled in vivo anti-HBs production in terms of the Ir genes involved, the hierarchy of responses status among H-2 haplotypes, antigen specificity, and kinetics. However, the correlation was not absolute in that several strains capable of producing group-specific anti-HBs in vivo did not demonstrate a group-specific T cell proliferative response to HBsAg. The proliferative responses to subtype- and group-specific determinants of HBsAg were mediated by Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2- T cells, and a possible suppressive role for Lyt-1-2+ T cells was observed. In addition to T cell proliferation, HBsAg-specific T cell activation could be measured in terms of IL 2 production, because anti-HBs responder but not nonresponder HBs-Ag-primed T cells quantitatively produced Il 2 in vitro. Finally, the T cell proliferative response to HBsAg was APC dependent and genetically restricted in that responder but not nonresponder parental APC could reconstitute the T cell response of (responder X nonresponder)F1 mice, and Ia molecules encoded in both the I-A and I-E subregion are involved in HBsAg-presenting cell function.  相似文献   

18.
The role of T cell-mediated and humoral immunity to type II collagen has been well documented in collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). Previous work from our laboratory has indicated that genomic deletions of TCR V beta genes may play a role in CIA resistance in mice. This indicated a selectivity of TCR usage by autoreactive T cells in CIA in mice. Certain strains of mice, although having a normal genomic V beta TCR repertoire, can show clonal deletion of peripheral T cells that bear specific V beta gene products in their TCR. These clonally deleted T cells are reactive with self-Ag such as minor lymphocyte stimulation (Mls) Ag. An Mls-congenic strain, BALB.D2.Mlsa, which differs only at the Mls-1 a locus from BALB/c (Mls-1b), was used to examine the effect of clonal deletion of Mls-1a-reactive T cells in CIA. These two strains were crossed to three CIA-susceptible strains, B10.RIII (H-2r, Mls-1b), DBA/1 (H-2q, Mls-1a), and B10.Q (H-2q, Mls-1b), and the crosses were injected with type II collagen. A significantly decreased incidence of arthritis was observed in the (BALB.D2.Mlsa x B10.Q)F1 hybrids, compared with (BALB/c x B10.Q)F1 hybrids, upon immunization with chick type II collagen. The BALB.D2.Mlsa cross mice also had significantly lower levels of antimouse collagen antibodies. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed the clonal deletion of Mls-1a-reactive V beta 8.1, V beta 6, V beta 7, and V beta 9 subsets in the (BALB.D2.Mlsa x B10.Q)F1 hybrids. The study of H-2q/d mice in (BALB.D2.Mlsa x B10.Q) x B10.Q back-crosses demonstrated a significant correlation between CIA resistance and Mls-1a locus. On the other hand, B10.RIII crosses showed only a modest decrease in CIA incidence in the presence of Mls-1a. As expected, all the DBA/1 crosses had an equal incidence of CIA, which was somewhat less than that seen in DBA/1 mice themselves. These studies point out that the Mls-1a locus could play a role in decreasing CIA incidence by clonal deletion of T cells bearing specific V beta TCR, which may be involved in the pathogenesis of CIA. The influence of the clonal deletion of T cells on CIA, and hence the usage of specific V beta TCR by autoreactive anti-type II collagen T cells, however, depends not only on the source of the type II collagen and the MHC class II molecules involved but also on other background genes in mice.  相似文献   

19.
T cell-mediated protection against a recombinant vaccinia virus was evaluated in mice with respect to the relative contributions of CTL vs that of T cell-dependent IL and of CD4+ cells. H-2b mice primed with the wildtype of vesicular stomatitis virus serotype Indiana (VSV-IND wt) mount an in vitro measurable cytotoxic response against the nucleoprotein (NP) of VSV-IND and are protected against a challenge infection with a vaccinia-VSV recombinant virus expressing the NP of VSV-IND (vacc-IND-NP). Their protective mechanism was highly susceptible to in vivo depletion of CD8+ T cells, but resistant to CD4+ depletion or treatment with anti-IFN-gamma and anti-TNF-alpha. Surprisingly, also VSV-CTL nonresponder H-2k mice were protected against a challenging infection with vacc-IND-NP when primed with VSV-IND wt. In contrast to the CTL responder H-2b mice, this protection was highly susceptible to CD4+ T cell depletion and to anti-IFN-gamma or anti-TNF-alpha treatment, but resistant to CD8+ T cell depletion. Antibodies were not responsible because they failed to transfer protection; in contrast CD4+ T cells conferred significant protection. VSV-CTL responder H-2b and nonresponder H-2k mice were protected almost equally well against a challenge dose of 10(3) pfu vacc-IND-NP inoculated intracerebrally. However, after intracerebral challenge with 5 x 10(6) pfu vacc-IND-NP, the CTL nonresponder mice died, whereas the CTL responder mice eliminated the virus by day 5. These results collectively show that CD4+ T cell-dependent IL may mediate antiviral protection, but their efficiency is relatively weak compared with CD8-mediated protection correlating with cytotoxic activity in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
The studies presented here investigated the relationship between T cell recognition of MHC-encoded products and non-MHC-linked Mls determinants. The first aspect addressed whether Mls-reactive T cells recognize Mls-encoded products alone or in association with MHC-encoded determinants. Initial studies used Mlsa-specific T cell clones that were generated by repeated stimulation of C57BL/6 or B10.A(5R) spleen cells with DBA/2 lymphoid cells. These clones recognized Mlsa on cells expressing MHC products of the H-2b, H-2d, and H-2k haplotypes, but not the H-2q haplotype. Thus, these cloned T cells were found to recognize Mlsa products in association with public but demonstrably polymorphic H-2 determinants. The question of whether T cell clones that were specific for self-H-2 determinants (autoreactive) or soluble antigen plus syngeneic H-2 (antigen-specific) could also be stimulated by Mlsa determinants was also addressed. A substantial proportion of the antigen-specific or autoreactive T cell clones tested were stimulated by Mlsa determinants. Furthermore, stimulation of these clones by Mlsa was H-2 restricted. The pattern of H-2-restricted recognition of Mlsa by these clones was not distinguishable from that observed in the Mlsa-specific T cell clones, nor was it influenced by the primary specificity or H-2 restriction pattern of a given clone. Although these findings provide a means of explaining the observation that Mls-reactive T cells exist at extremely high precursor frequencies, they also raise questions regarding the nature of the receptor structures which are used by a single T cell in the recognition of two or more apparently distinct stimuli.  相似文献   

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