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1.
Cell fusion was performed between spleen cells from young BALB/cBy (H-2 d) mice which have never been immunized and SP2/0 mouse plasmacytoma cells. A monoclonal H-2-specific cytotoxic IgM antibody was obtained (By-1) which detected a new public biregional H-2 specificity, H-2.m210. The mcAb By-1 reacted strongly with H-2Kd, Dd, and H-2s antigens, gave weak cross-reactions with H-2Kk, Dq, H-2r, and H-2v antigens and was negative with H-2b, H-2f, H-2p, and H-2Ld antigens. A polymorphic reaction pattern was also observed on a panel of lymphocytes from B 10.W strains. The intriguing finding on this reaction pattern was the reactivity on H-2d cells, including the syngeneic BALB/cBy and truly autologous cells. As shown by capping and immunoprecipitation experiments on H-2d cells and by studies on H-2d-transfected mouse L cells, the target molecules for McAb By-1 were H-2Kd and H-2Dd molecules. The BALB/cBy mouse, from whose spleen cells the McAb By-1 was obtained, survived after the fusion experiment, and serum was examined for the presence of cytotoxic H-2-specific antibodies during the rest of its life. At the time of the fusion, no autoreactive serum antibodies were found, but about 4 months later, we found in the serum of this mouse autoreactive H-2-specific cytotoxic IgM antibodies. The serum antibodies followed the same reaction pattern as that of the McAb By-1. As far as we know, this is the first report of autoreactive H-2-specific antibodies in serum of a mouse which has never been immunized and of the first natural autoreactive H-2-specific monoclonal antibody.Abbreviations McAb monoclonal antibody - MHC major histocompatibility complex - H-2 major histocompatibility complex of mice - CTLs cytotoxic T cells - FMF flow microfluorometry - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - LPS lipopolysaccharide W.E. coli 0111:134 - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - Iodogen 1,3,4,6,-tetrachloro-3,6-diphenylglycoluril - GAMIg goat-antimouse immunoglobulin - Staph-A Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I  相似文献   

2.
This study has investigated the cross-reactivity upon thymic selection of thymocytes expressing transgenic TCR derived from a murine CD8+ CTL clone. The Idhigh+ cells in this transgenic mouse had been previously shown to mature through positive selection by class I MHC, Dq or Lq molecule. By investigating on various strains, we found that the transgenic TCR cross-reacts with three different MHCs, resulting in positive or negative selection. Interestingly, in the TCR-transgenic mice of H-2q background, mature Idhigh+ T cells appeared among both CD4+ and CD8+ subsets in periphery, even in the absence of RAG-2 gene. When examined on beta2-microglobulin-/- background, CD4+, but not CD8+, Idhigh+ T cells developed, suggesting that maturation of CD8+ and CD4+ Idhigh+ cells was MHC class I (Dq/Lq) and class II (I-Aq) dependent, respectively. These results indicated that this TCR-transgenic mouse of H-2q background contains both classes of selecting MHC ligands for the transgenic TCR simultaneously. Further genetic analyses altering the gene dosage and combinations of selecting MHCs suggested novel asymmetric effects of class I and class II MHC on the positive selection of thymocytes. Implications of these observations in CD4+/CD8+ lineage commitment are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
 The influence of β-chain diversity on the expressed T-cell receptor (TCR) α-chain repertoire was investigated using transgenic mice which exclusively express a single rearranged TCR β-chain gene. Analysis of these mice using α-chain-specific recombinant cDNA libraries showed that expression of the transgene-encoded β chain results in significant skewing in Tcra-V gene segment usage vs nontransgenic mice. Skewing was most pronounced towards α chains using TCRA-V segments. Sequence analysis of Tcra-V8-containing genes from transgenic T cells revealed predominant use of a single Tcra-J segment (Tcra-J24), which was not detected in Tcra-V8 containing genes isolated from nontransgenic T cells. Further analysis revealed that co-expression of Tcra-V8 with Tcra-J24 in β-transgenic mice is exhibited almost exclusively by CD4+ T cells, and is associated with a limited number of closely related N-regions. Analysis of transgenic CD8+ T cells demonstrated predominant co-expression of Tcra-V8 with another Tcra-J (Tcra-J30), together with a different, limited N-region sequence. We conclude that the composition of expressed β chains can profoundly influence the selection of companion α chains expressed in the periphery, and that α-chain N and J regions play a crucial role in discriminating between class I vs class II major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted recognition. Further, these results are in agreement with recent data concerning the crystal structure of the TCR, and most consistent with a model for TCR structure in which the complementarity determining region (CDR)3α domain participates in direct contact with the MHC. Received: 28 January 1997 / Revised: 22 July 1997  相似文献   

4.
The effect of t-butyl hydroperoxide (t-BOOH) on the induction of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) class I genes has been studied in two cell clones (B9 and G2) of the methylcholanthrene-induced murine fibrosarcoma GR9. These two clones were selected based on their different biological and biochemical behavior specially related to their tumor induction capability when injected into a BALB/c mouse. t-BOOH (0.125mM) induced the expression of H-2 molecules in both cell clones. In B9 cell clone, in which MHC basal expression is very low or absent, t-BOOH significantly induced H-2Kd, H-2Dd and H-2Ld molecules. In G2 cell clone the expression of MHC class I genes was also enhanced by the xenobiotic, the effect being especially significant on the H-2Ld molecule which is not expressed under basal conditions. H-2 molecules expression was accompanied by the activation of the transactivator factor NFκB. These results suggest that oxidative stress may modulate the antigen expression of tumor cells and thus the immune response of the host organism.

Basal levels of oxidative parameters, such as anti-oxidant enzymes, malondialdehyde (MDA) and the DNA damaged base 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), showed differences between the two fibrosarcoma cell clones.  相似文献   

5.
Influenza nucleoprotein (NP) is an important target antigen for influenza A virus cross-reactive cytotoxic T cells (Tc). Here we examine the NP epitope recognized by cloned and polyclonal BALB/c Tc and the genetics of this recognition pattern. We can define NP residues 147–161 as the epitope seen in conjunction with K d , the only H-2d class I responder allele for NP restriction. H-2 d /H-2 b F1 mice (C57BL × DBA/2) primed by influenza infection lyse only H-2d target cells treated with peptide 147–161 while H-2b targets are recognized only after treatment with NP residues 365–379 (previously found to be recognized by Db restricted Tc cells). Tc cell recognition of NP peptide 147–161 is entirely dictated by expression of K d and not by other B10 or OH background genes of congenic mice. Restriction of a unique NP sequence by each responder class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) allele suggests that antigen and class I MHC interact for Tc recognition.  相似文献   

6.
The variable domain V3 in the outer glycoprotein gp 120 of HIV-1 is a highly important region with respect to immune response during the course of viral infection. Neutralizing antibodies are produced against this domain; in addition, it has been shown to be a functionally active epitope for T helper and cytotoxic T cells. The high degree of amino acid variability in individual HIV-isolates, however, limits the use of the V3-domain in approaches to vaccine development. In order to characterize the residues important for antibody interaction and binding to MHC class I proteins, we constructed a consensus sequence of the V3-domain with broad reactivity [1] and used synthetic peptides derived from this consensus with individual residues altered to alanine. These peptides were used as antigens in ELISA tests to define the amino acids which are important for binding to human and rabbit/anti-peptide immunoglobulins. In addition, we used these alanine-derived peptides in interaction studies with human HLA-A2.1 and mouse H-2Dd by testing their capacity to stabilize the respective MHC class I protein complexes on the surface of mutant cell lines T2 and RMA-S transfected with Dd gene. The experimental tests allowed us to define individual residues involved in antibody and MHC-protein interaction, respectively. In a further approach, we used those results to design interaction models with HLA-A2.1 and H-2Dd. Therefore, a structural model for H-2Dd was built that exhibits an overall similar conformation to the parental crystal structure of HLA-A2.1. The resulting interaction models show V3-peptide bound in an extended β-conformation with a bulge in its centre for both H-2Dd and HLA-A2.1 complexes. The N- and C-termini of V3 peptide reside in conserved pockets within both MHC-proteins. Anchoring residues could be determined that are crucial for the binding of the respective MHC class I haplotype. The cross-reactivity of V3-peptide in enhancing the expression of two different MHC class I molecules (H-2Dd and HLA-A2.1) is shown to be based on similar peptide binding that induces an almost identical peptide conformation.  相似文献   

7.
A monoclonal antibody (mAb) TP-3 has been established by immunizing rats with the BALB/c mouse thymic epithelial cell line TEL-2. The TP-3 antigen is expressed on stroma cells of thymus, spleen, and lymph node in syngeneic BALB/c mice (H-2 d ). This antigen is also expressed at a low level on the cell surface of immature thymocytes, and at a high level on mature T and B cells. In allogeneic mice such as C57BL/6 (H-2 b ) or C3H (H-2 k ), no cells expressed the TP-3 antigen. Using H-2 congenic mice, reactivity with mAb TP-3 was found to map to a region of H-2D d L d or between D d and Qa, suggesting that TP-3 is a major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen. However, immunoprecipitation analysis indicated that this antigen is not identical to the classical mouse class I molecules in terms of molecular size, antigenicity, and tissue distribution.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction between class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) products and T cells was studied using H-2Kb-specific alloreactive T-cell lines and clones obtained by repeated in vitro stimulation with allogeneic cells. Induction of proliferation of these T cells appeared to involve two signals: the H-2Kb alloantigen and interleukins. Immunopurified liposome-inserted H-2Kb, which stimulates specific secondary in vitro cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses, could not replace cell-associated H-2Kb in the stimulation of these T-cell lines, even in the presence of feeder cells and interleukins. When T-cell lines were initiated in vitro and repeatedly stimulated with H-2Kb liposomes and feeder cells, it was possible to obtain T cells that could proliferate in response to H-2Kb liposomes in the presence of feeder cells and interleukin-2-containing supernatants or on H-2K b -expressing cells. Only stimulation with cells permitted maintenance of these T cells in culture for more than 12 weeks. Analyses of cell surface markers and of patterns of inhibition of proliferation by monoclonal antibodies (mAb) of T-cell lines induced in vitro with cell- or liposome-associated H-2Kb indicated that T-cell stimulation by class I antigen can occur in at least two ways. In the first, the H-2Kb-induced proliferation of Lyt-1- Lyt-2+ T4- T cells is inhibited by H-2Kb- and by Lyt-2-specific mAb, but not by Ia or T4-specific mAb. In the second, both Lyt-2+ and T4+ T cells are involved and the H-2Kb-induced proliferation is inhibited by H-2Kb- and Lyt-2-specific mAb and by Ia- and T4-specific mAb.Abbreviations used in this paper Ab antibody - mAb monoclonal antibody - C complement - i.p. intraperitoneally - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - PBS-B-N PBS containing bovine serum albumin and NaN3 - CTL cytotoxic T lymphocyte - Th T helper cell - MHC major histocompatibility complex - PMA 4-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate - SCA concanavalin A-stimulated rat spleen cell supernatant - SC16 EL4 clone 16 supernatant - IL-1 interleukin-1 - IL-2 interleukin-2 (T-cell growth factor) - FCS fetal calf serum - H-2Kb-lip. H-2Kb inserted in liposomes - C. E. cell equivalents  相似文献   

9.
A productive CD8+ T-cell response to a viral infection requires rapid division and proliferation of virus-specific CD8+ T cells. Tetramer-based enrichment assays have recently given estimates of the numbers of peptide-major histocompatibility complex-specific CD8+ T cells in naïve mice, but precursor frequencies for entire viruses have been examined only by using in vitro limiting-dilution assays (LDAs). To examine CD8+ T-cell precursor frequencies for whole viruses, we developed an in vivo LDA and found frequencies of naïve CD8+ T-cell precursors of 1 in 1,444 for vaccinia virus (VV) (∼13,850 VV-specific CD8+ T cells per mouse) and 1 in 2,958 for lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) (∼6,761 LCMV-specific CD8+ T cells per mouse) in C57BL/6J mice. In mice immune to VV, the number of VV-specific precursors, not surprisingly, dramatically increased to 1 in 13 (∼1,538,462 VV-specific CD8+ T cells per mouse), consistent with estimates of VV-specific memory T cells. In contrast, precursor numbers for LCMV did not increase in VV-immune mice (1 in 4,562, with ∼4,384 LCMV-specific CD8+ T cells per VV-immune mouse). Using H-2Db-restricted LCMV GP33-specific P14-transgenic T cells, we found that, after donor T-cell take was accounted for, approximately every T cell transferred underwent a full proliferative expansion in response to LCMV infection. This high efficiency was also seen with memory populations, suggesting that most antigen-specific T cells will proliferate extensively at a limiting dilution in response to infections. These results show that frequencies of naïve and memory CD8+ T cell precursors for whole viruses can be remarkably high.The immune response to a viral infection often involves the rapid proliferation of CD8+ effector T cells that recognize virus-infected targets expressing 8- to 11-amino-acid-long peptides on class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. This recognition is mediated by membrane-bound T-cell receptors (TCRs) that are generated through largely random DNA recombination events of the many TCRα and -β genes, encoding polypeptide chains that heterodimerize to form the recognition structure of T cells. The recombination of the segments also involves addition or deletion of nucleotides during the joining process, causing even greater diversity, and these processes allow for a very broad range of T-cell specificities, with a calculated theoretical diversity of ∼1015 TCRs in the mouse (7). By use of PCR, CDR3 spectratyping, and sequencing techniques, it was estimated that there are approximately 2 × 106 distinct TCR specificities in a mouse spleen (1, 5). This is far below the theoretical level of T-cell diversity, but considering estimates of T-cell degeneracy that propose that a single TCR can recognize up to 106 peptide-MHC (pMHC) complexes (17, 36), it is likely that the functional diversity is much greater than the number of individual TCRs.It has been of interest to calculate the number of T cells that would either recognize or respond to a pathogen or to a specific pMHC complex. Early estimates of numbers of CD8+ T cells that are specific to a single virus, i.e., precursor frequencies, took advantage of an in vitro limiting-dilution assay (LDA) and calculated CD8+ T-cell virus-specific precursor frequencies to be on the order of 1 in 100,000 in naïve mice and predicted that these cells needed to undergo about 15 divisions to reach the higher precursor frequencies found at day 8 postinfection (29, 30). The efficiency of such assays, however, is relatively poor. Later studies estimated the number of pMHC-specific CD8+ T cells in a naïve mouse by CDR3 sequencing. H-2Kd-restricted T cells specific to HLA residues 170 to 179 (HLA 170-179) were sorted by tetramer from human tumor-immunized mice, and their Vβ CDR3 regions were sequenced. After a plateau suggesting that the majority of the different TCRs had been sequenced was reached, exhaustive sequencing was then used to identify the frequencies of these sequences in naïve mice. These studies found that there were about 600 CD8+ T cells specific for that pMHC complex in naïve mice (4). A second strategy used an in vivo competition assay with H-2Db-restricted lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) GP33-specific P14-transgenic T cells to estimate the number of GP33-specific CD8 T cells in naïve mice and calculated the number to be between 100 to 200 cells per mouse (2).Others estimated numbers of pMHC-specific T cells by sequencing the CDR3β regions of antigen-specific T cells that had expanded during an acute infection. By calculating a measure of CDR3 diversity and then assuming a logarithmic distribution of diversity, they extrapolated the number of T-cell clones that responded to an acute infection. With this technique, 300 to 500 H-2Db-restricted mouse hepatitis virus (MHV)-encoded S510 clonotypes were calculated to be in the central nervous systems of acutely infected mice, with ∼100 to 900 clonotypes calculated to be in chronically infected mice (24). Later studies used a gamma interferon (IFN-γ) capture assay instead of tetramer sorting and estimated 1,100 to 1,500 H-2Db-restricted S510-specific clonotypes and 600 to 900 clonotypes of the subdominant H-2Kb-restricted MHV S598 peptide-specific T cells in the spleens of acutely infected mice (25). Those studies also estimated that there were 1,000 to 1,200 different H-2Db-restricted GP33-specific clonotypes that could respond to an LCMV infection.More-recent studies have taken advantage of magnetic tetramer binding enrichment and double tetramer staining of cells from the spleen and lymph nodes of naïve mice to determine pMHC precursor frequencies, with the assumption that most CD8+ T cells in a naïve mouse reside in lymphoid organs and will react with tetramers. This technique was first described by Moon et al. for CD4+ T cells, and it detected ∼190 I-Ab 2W1S 52-68-specific T cells, ∼20 I-Ab Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium FLiC 427-441-specific T cells, and ∼16 I-Ab chicken ovalbumin (OVA) 323-339-specific T cells per mouse (19). This same technique was then used to determine numbers of pMHC-specific CD8+ T cells for epitopes derived from a variety of viruses and found 15 to 1,070 pMHC-specific CD8+ T cells per mouse, depending on the specificity of the pMHC tetramer (10, 15, 23). Determinations of CD8+ T-cell precursor frequencies in humans are currently not experimentally attainable, but exhaustive sequencing of an HLA-A2.1-restricted influenza A virus (IAV) M1 58-66-specific T-cell response has suggested that there are at least 141 different clonotypes that can grow out in response to an in vitro stimulation with peptide, providing a minimum number of T cells that can respond to this pMHC complex in humans (22).Most of the assays estimate the number of T cells specific to single peptides in individual mice. These assays, therefore, do not determine the numbers of CD8+ T cells that can proliferate in response to an entire virus, especially if the virus is known to have many epitopes or if epitopes for the virus have not been described. By examining the average number of pMHC-specific CD8+ T cells in a naïve mouse and comparing this to the number of pMHC-specific CD8+ T cells that are in a mouse at the peak of the T-cell response, it can be calculated that CD8+ T cells divide approximately 12 to 14 times after virus infection (23). Considering that the progeny of one precursor after only 12 divisions can result in just over 4,000 cells, and since recent experiments using H-2Kb-restricted chicken OVA 257-264-specific OT-1-transgenic T cells have confirmed that the progeny from a single cell can be detected in a mouse after infection (31), an in vivo LDA was set up to take advantage of the extensive division and proliferation of virus-specific CD8+ T cells in order to determine virus-specific CD8+ T-cell precursor frequencies.Here, we show that by transferring limiting amounts of carboxyfluorescein succinimidyl ester (CFSE)-labeled Thy1.1+ Ly5.2+ heterogeneous CD8+ T cells into Thy1.2+ Ly5.1+ hosts, we are able to calculate CD8+ T-cell precursor frequencies for whole viruses. Our calculations are based on finding the number of donor CD8+ T cells that results in low-level-CFSE (CFSElo) (i.e., proliferated) donor CD8 T cells in 50% of the hosts. Using probit or Reed and Muench 50% endpoint calculations (3, 26), we are able to calculate CD8+ T-cell precursor frequencies. We show here that frequencies of naïve CD8+ T-cell precursors for whole viruses are quite high and that our in vivo LDA calculates whole-virus precursor frequencies in line with determinations using other methods with naïve and immune mice.  相似文献   

10.
The Tcrb-V10b+ T cell population has been examined with a newly established antibody, KT10b, specific for Tcrb-V10b but not Tcrb-V10a. H-2E+ mice have higher levels of Tcrb-V10b+ T cells (4.3%–11.%) than H-2E mice (2.2%–4.9%). This difference appears to be determined by levels of Tcrb-V10b+ T cells in the CD4 population. F1 mice between H-2E+ and H-2E mice dominantly express higher levels of Tcrb-V10b+ T cells. [NOD (E–) x (NOD x A (E+))F1] backcross mice show positive selection of Tcrb-V10b+ CD4+ T cells by H-2E. On the other hand other backcross analyses reveal positive selection of Tcrb-V10b+ CD8+ T cells by certain major histocompatibility class I molecules. Involvement of non-H-2 antigens in these positive selections remain to be determined. Address correspondence and offprint requests to: K. Tomonari.  相似文献   

11.
The D region of the H-2 d haplotype contains five class I genes: H-2D d , D2 d , D3 d , D4 d and H-2L d . Although previous studies have suggested the presence of D-end encoded class I molecules in addition to H-2Dd and H-2Ld, segregation of genes encoding such molecules has not been demonstrated. In this report we have used cãtotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to examine the D region of the H-2 d haplotype for the presence of additional class I molecules. CTL generated in (C3H × B6.K1)F1 (K k D k , K b D b ) mice against the hybrid class I gene product Q10d/Ld expressed on L cells cross-react with H-2Ld but not H-2Dd molecules, as determined by lysis of transfected cells expressing H-2Ld but not H-2Dd. Although H-2Ld-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAb) completely inhibit H-2Ld-specific CTL from killing B10.A(3R) (K b D d L d ) target cells, only partial inhibition of anti-Q10 CTL-mediated lysis was observed, suggesting the presence of an additional D-end molecule as a target for these latter CTL. To identify the region containing the gene encoding the Q10 cross-reactive molecule, we show that anti-Q10 CTL lyse target cells from a D-region recombinant strain B10.RQDB, which has H-2D d , D2 d , D3 d , D4 d , and H-2D b but not the H-2L d H-2 d , and H-2L d (including D2 d , D3 d , and D4 d , lacks this anti-Q10 CTL target molecule. Together, these data demonstrate that a class I gene mapping between H-2D d and H-2L d encodes an antigen recognozed by anti-Q10 CTL. A likely candidate for this gene is D2 d , D3 d or D4 d .  相似文献   

12.
A monoclonal H-2d-specific antibody markedly inhibits target-cell lysis mediated by two influenza virus A/JAP/57-specific, H-2K d -restricted cloned CTL lines. Three other A/JAP/57-specific, H-2 d -restricted CTL clones (two of which are also restricted to H-2K d in target-cell recognition) are only minimally inhibited by this monoclonal antibody. The inhibitory effect of the antibody is not due to selective binding to certain cloned CTL lines but rather is due to blocking of a determinant on the target cell. The monoclonal antibody produces partial inhibition of lysis mediated by a heterogeneous population of A/JAP/57-specific, H-2 d -restricted CTL. Likewise the profound, selective inhibition of cytolysis produced by the H-2d-specific monoclonal antibody could not be reproduced with a conventional H-2d alloantiserum. These observations suggest that more than one site on a particular H-2K or H-2D molecule can serve as a determinant for H-2-restricted CTL recognition. They furthermore imply that there is more than one recognition structure (receptor) for self MHC products clonally distributed among a population of H-2-restricted CTL directed to a particular antigen.  相似文献   

13.
Peptides derived from endogenous proteins are presented by MHC class I molecules, whereas those derived from exogenous proteins are presented by MHC class II molecules. This strict segregation has been reconsidered in recent reports in which exogenous antigens are shown to be presented by MHC class I molecules in the phagocytic pathway. In this report, the presentation pathway of an exogenously added highly antigenic polypeptide encoded by the murine AIDS (MAIDS) defective virus gag p12 gene is investigated. A 25-mer polypeptide (P12–25) encoded within the gag p12 region of the MAIDS defective virus was found to be effective in stimulating unprimed B6 (H-2b) CD8+ T cells in vitro. The presentation of P12–25 is sensitive to cytochalasin B and D, brefeldin A and gelonin, a ribosome-inactivating protein synthesis inhibitor, but less sensitive or resistant to lactacystin, a highly specific inhibitor of the proteasome. Interestingly, CA-074, a selective inhibitor of cathepsin B, inhibited presentation of the polypeptide, indicating its involvement in the degradation of the P12–25 polypeptide. In fact, when P12–25 was digested with purified cathepsin B in vitro, a highly antigenic 11-mer peptide containing the class I (H-2Db)-binding motif was obtained. Our results favor the phagosome/macropinosome-to-cytosol-to-endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-to-cell surface pathway for exogenous antigens presented by MHC class I molecules. These findings may be relevant to exploiting peptide vaccines that specifically elicit CD8+ T cell immunity in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
The development of TCR alphabeta(+), CD8alphabeta(+) intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) is dependent on MHC class I molecules expressed in the thymus, while some CD8alphaalpha(+) IEL may arise independently of MHC class I. We examined the influence of MHC I allele dosage on the development CD8(+) T cells in RAG 2(-/-) mice expressing the H-2D(b)-restricted transgenic TCR specific for the male, Smcy-derived H-Y Ag (H-Y TCR). IEL in male mice heterozygous for the restricting (H-2D(b)) and nonrestricting (H-2D(d)) MHC class I alleles (MHC F(1)) were composed of a mixture of CD8alphabeta(+) and CD8alphaalpha(+) T cells, while T cells in the spleen were mostly CD8alphabeta(+). This was unlike IEL in male mice homozygous for H-2D(b), which had predominantly CD8alphaalpha(+) IEL and few mostly CD8(-) T cells in the spleen. Our results demonstrate that deletion of CD8alphabeta(+) cells in H-Y TCR male mice is dependent on two copies of H-2D(b), whereas the generation of CD8alphaalpha(+) IEL requires only one copy. The existence of CD8alphabeta(+) and CD8alphaalpha(+) IEL in MHC F(1) mice suggests that their generation is not mutually exclusive in cells with identical TCR. Furthermore, our data imply that the level of the restricting MHC class I allele determines a threshold for conventional CD8alphabeta(+) T cell selection in the thymus of H-Y TCR-transgenic mice, whereas the development of CD8alphaalpha(+) IEL is dependent on, but less sensitive to, this MHC class I allele.  相似文献   

15.
Activation of CD4+ T cells helps establish and sustain other immune responses. We have previously shown that responses against a broad set of nine CD4+ T-cell epitopes were present in the setting of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) Armstrong infection in the context of H-2d. This is quite disparate to the H-2b setting, where only two epitopes have been identified. We were interested in determining whether a broad set of responses was unique to H-2d or whether additional CD4+ T-cell epitopes could be identified in the setting of the H-2b background. To pursue this question, we infected C57BL/6 mice with LCMV Armstrong and determined the repertoire of CD4+ T-cell responses using overlapping 15-mer peptides corresponding to the LCMV Armstrong sequence. We confirmed positive responses by intracellular cytokine staining and major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide binding assays. A broad repertoire of responses was identified, consisting of six epitopes. These epitopes originate from the nucleoprotein (NP) and glycoprotein (GP). Out of the six newly identified CD4+ epitopes, four of them also stimulate CD8+ T cells in a statistically significant manner. Furthermore, we assessed these CD4+ T-cell responses during the memory phase of LCMV Armstrong infection and after infection with a chronic strain of LCMV and determined that a subset of the responses could be detected under these different conditions. This is the first example of a broad repertoire of shared epitopes between CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the context of viral infection. These findings demonstrate that immunodominance is a complex phenomenon in the context of helper responses.  相似文献   

16.
The ability of lethally irradiated C57BL/6 mice to acutely reject H-2d bone marrow is due to a lymphocyte population that is NK1+, ASGM1+, CD4, CD8, CD3+. Transfer of spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice expressing these antigens into nonresponder 129 mice adoptively transfers the ability to reject H-2d marrow grafts. The specificity of this rejection maps to the H-2D major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region. Transplantation of high doses of H-2d marrow into C57BL/6 overrides the acute rejection mechanism leading to graft survival. During growth of the graft, a cytolytic activity develops that is due to ASGM1+, CD8+ cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTLs) with H-2Ld specificity. The possibility that the ASGM1+, CD8+ CTLs are descendents of the CD3+, NK1+, ASGM1+, CD8 cells responsible for acute rejection is investigated by adoptive cell transfer experiments. We show that beige mice that lack NK1+ cells as well as the ability to acutely reject H-2d marrow fail to generate specific CTLs after transplantation with a high dose of H-2d marrow. Transfer of highly purified NK1+ cells from B6.PL-Ly-2 a /Ly-3 a (Lyt-2.1) into beige mice together with H-2d marrow leads to generation of Lyt-2.1 CTLs from donor NK1+ cells. These results show that specific CTLs are generated from NK1+ cells during acute marrow graft rejection. Offprint requests to: G. Dennert.  相似文献   

17.
Tcrb-V6+ T cells are deleted by an endogenous superantigen probably encoded by a mouse mammary tumor provirus (Mtv), Mtv-7, in association with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules. In contrast, Tcrb-V6+CD4+ T cells are positively selected by MHC class II E molecules in Mtv-7 mice. We have examined the levels of Tcrb-V6+CD4+ and Tcrb-V6+CD8+ T cells from six combinations of backcross mice. In this paper we show that: 1) Tcrb-V6+CD8+ T cells can be positively selected by MHC class I molecules; 2) MHC class II A molecules can also influence the levels of Tcrb-V6+CD4+ T cells; 3) Mtv-7 NZW mice have a new Mtv, Mtv-44, which co-segregates with a gene encoding the partial deletion ligand for Tcrb-V6+ T cells; 4) the remaining Tcrb-V6+ T cells from mice with partial deletion of these T cells appear not to be anergized in the periphery. Address correspondence and offprint requests to: K. Tomonari.  相似文献   

18.
Thymocytes fail to tolerize the developing T cell repertoire to self MHC class I (MHC I) Ags because transgenic (CD2Kb) mice expressing H-2Kb solely in lymphoid cell lineages reject skin grafts mismatched only for H-2Kb. In this study, we examined why thymocytes fail to tolerize the T cell repertoire to self MHC I Ags. The ability of CD2Kb mice to reject H-2Kb skin grafts was age dependent because CD2Kb mice older than 20 wk accepted skin grafts. T cells from younger CD2Kb mice proliferated, but did not develop cytotoxic functions in vitro in response to H-2Kb. Proliferative responses were dominated by H-2Kb-specific, CD4+ T cells rather than CD8+ T cells. Representative CD4+ T cell clones from CD2Kb mice were MHC II restricted and recognized processed H-2Kb. TCR transgenic mice were generated from one CD4+ T cell clone (361) to monitor development of H-2Kb-specific immature thymocytes when all thymic cells or lymphoid cell lineages only expressed H-2Kb. Thymocyte precursors were not eliminated and mice were not tolerant to H-2Kb when Tg361 TCR transgenic mice were intercrossed with CD2Kb mice. In contrast, all thymocyte precursors were eliminated efficiently in thymic microenvironments in which all cells expressed H-2Kb. We conclude that self MHC I Ags expressed exclusively in thymocytes do not induce T cell tolerance because presentation of processed self MHC I Ags on self MHC II molecules fails to induce negative selection of CD4+ T cell precursors. This suggests that some self Ags are effectively compartmentalized and cannot induce self-tolerance in the T cell repertoire.  相似文献   

19.
In capping experiments with peripheral T lymphocytes, two anti-H-2.28 sera (AKR anti-AKR.L, anti-Kb, and C3H anti-0H.B10, k anti-b) that do not contain any Qa-2-specific antibodies are able to redistribute not only the H-2.28-positive H-2 molecules, but also Qa-2 molecules. This is due to the capacity of these sera to react with Qa-2 molecules because on cells where all known molecules of the H-2 d haplotype were capped (K1d, K2d, Dd, Md, Ld, L2d), both antisera still reacted when the cells came from a Qa-2 positive Dd strain (B10.A) but not when the cells were of Qa-2 negative strain (BALB/cByA). The reaction with la and non-H-2 antigens was excluded in these experiments. These data show that Qa-2 and H-2 antigens share some specificities of the H-2.28 family. Other anti-private and anti-public anti-H-2 sera failed to react with the Qa-2 molecules.  相似文献   

20.
Human T cells responding against transplanted allogeneic lung tissue have been implicated in late graft failure secondary to obliterative bronchiolitis. This obliterative airways disease (OAD) also develops in heterotopic murine tracheal allografts in association with graft infiltration by both CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells. To date, there has been little evidence to suggest that directly alloreactive CD8(+) T cells either promote chronic rejection or lead to the development of OAD following airway allotransplantation. Using L(d)-specific TCR-Tg 2C CD8(+) T cells adoptively transferred into wild-type B6 (H-2(b)) mice and the transplantation of BALB/c (H-2(d)) tracheal allografts, we now show that the direct recognition of donor-specific class I MHC molecules by host CD8(+) T cells leads to their activation, clonal expansion within the graft, and differentiation to an effector phenotype with the capacity to induce airway fibrosis. In addition, these experiments demonstrate that ongoing direct alloantigen recognition within the transplanted airway tissue is necessary for the recruitment and retention of these directly alloreactive CD8(+) T cells. Thus, these experiments are the first to definitively show a role for directly alloreactive CD8(+) T cells in the chronic rejection that leads to OAD.  相似文献   

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