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Antigen-specific suppressor cell activity in man: I. Temporal, antigenic, and proliferative requirements
Authors:E C Keystone  D D Gladman  D Cane
Affiliation:University of Toronto, Rheumatic Disease Unit, The Wellesley Hospital, and Women''s College Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, M4Y 1J3 Canada
Abstract:The temporal, antigenic, and proliferative requirements of antigen-specific suppression of the in vitro plaque-forming cell (PFC) response of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) were studied. Suppressor cell activity (SCA) was generated by priming PBM with high doses of the T-cell-dependent antigen ovalbumin (OA) and measured by adding washed primed cells to target PFC cultures. Priming with high doses of OA was shown to induce a population of antigen-specific T lymphocytes which interfered with the anti-OA PFC response of optimally stimulated target cultures. The generation of SCA was demonstrated following as little as 24 hr of high-dose OA priming and could be abrogated by prolonged priming (72 hr) or by pretreatment with mitomycin prior to priming. The expression of optimal SCA required the addition of primed PBM at the initiation of the target culture and could be directly correlated to both the OA concentration used for priming and the number of primed cells added. Higher priming doses of OA (up to 100 μg) generated increasing numbers of cells capable of antigen-specific SCA as measured via a cell dilution protocol. Our data suggest that an antigen-driven and dose-dependent expansion of an antigen-specific T-suppressor cell pool is an early regulative event limiting the in vitro PFC response of human lymphocytes to OA.
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