Allospecific T cell recognition of HLA-A2 antigens: Evidence for group-specific and subgroup-specific epitopes |
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Authors: | Lesley E. Wallace Melanie A. Houghton Alan B. Rickinson M. Anthony Epstein Benjamin A. Bradle |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Pathology, University of Bristol Medical School, Bristol, England;(2) Department of Cancer Studies, University of Birmingham Medical School, B15 2TJ Birmingham, England;(3) Regional Transfusion Centre, U.K. Transplant Service, Bristol, England |
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Abstract: | Interleukin 2-dependent alloreactive cytotoxic T cell lines, with activity predominantly directed against the HLA-A2 antigen, have been generated in vitro by stimulating blood mononuclear cells from donors nonimmune to the Epstein-Barr (EB) virus with appropriate numbers of EB virus-transformed B cells from A2-homozygous individuals. Such effector cells were tested against a panel of EB virus-transformed target cell lines all expressing the serologically defined A2 antigen but typed into common A2 and variant A2 subgroups on the basis of their recognition by A2-restricted EB virus-specific cytotoxic T cells. Variant A2 responder cells cocultivated with common A2-bearing stimulators gave rise to effector T cell lines which recognized only the common A2-bearing subgroup of targets. By contrast, responder cells from A2-negative donors stimulated with common A2-bearing cells produced effector T cell lines in which the strong lysis of common A2-bearing targets was accompanied by a lower, but still significant, lysis directed against all targets within the variant A2 subgroup. In both cases, lysis of the target cells was blocked equally well by the anti-A2-specific monoclonal antibody MA2.1 as by the monoclonal antibody W6/32 specific for HLA-A, -B, and -C determinants. This suggests that HLA-A2 molecules possess at least two distinct sets of epitopes capable of inducing alloreactive T cell cytotoxicity: first, epitopes probably associated with T cell-restricting sites, which generate subgroup-specific responses, and second, epitopes shared by all A2 molecules, and perhaps associated with serologically defined sites, which generate pan A2 group-specific responses.Abbreviations used in this paper EB Epstein-Barr - IL-2 Interleukin 2 - UM unfractionated mononuclear - AET aminoethylisothiouroniumbromide hydrobromide |
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