A subset of mouse splenic macrophages can constitutively present alloantigen directly to CD8+ T cells. |
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Authors: | J M McCormack D Sun W S Walker |
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Affiliation: | Department of Immunology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38101-0318. |
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Abstract: | About a third of mouse splenic macrophage (M phi) progenitors give rise to cloned progeny that constitutively induce the selective proliferation of naive allogeneic CD8+ T cells in a CD4+ helper cell-independent manner--a response that is inhibited by mAb to the MHC class I molecules present on the M phi. Colony-mixing experiments indicated that the failure of most M phi clones to present allo-Ag was not due to their suppression of the ability of CD8+ cells to respond, nor did the nonpresenting clones interfere with the activity of the allo-Ag presenting M phi. The allo-Ag presenting phenotypes were found to be a stable characteristic in a panel of cell lines derived from individual clones of M phi. Analysis of the cell lines revealed that the differential expression of allo-APC activity could not be attributed to the levels of MHC class I molecules; rather, the cell lines and the primary M phi clones differ in their expression of a cell-associated costimulator molecule that likely functions to induce the expression of the IL-2R on and the secretion of IL-2 from the T cells. |
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