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Specific T-cell-mediated killing of autologous lung tumour cells
Authors:B M Vose
Institution:The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, P.O. Box 1809, San Diego, California 92112 USA
Abstract:The phenomenon that strong syngeneic T-cell-mediated cytotoxicity is observed if killer, stimulator, and target cells share H-2 histocompatibility antigens is called H-2 restriction. Here a syngeneic model system making use of hapten-coupled stimulator and target cells is used to explore whether H-2 restriction is absolute or not. Using TNP-coupled spleen or tumor cells as stimulator or target cells in syngeneic and allogeneic situations, it is shown that neither the induction step nor the effector step of TNP-dependent killing is H-2 restricted. By varying the experimental assay conditions more or less H-2-restricted, TNP-dependent killing can be observed. For instance, suboptimal coupling of TNP to targets may result in H-2-restricted killing. Similarly, the use of spleen cell targets as opposed to spleen blast cells or tumor cells may result in H-2-restricted lysis. In contrast optimal coupling of TNP to sensitive target cells and coupling of TNP to cells with certain H-2 haplotypes may lead to significant TNP-dependent killing which is not H-2 restricted. Since hapten-coupled cells lacking H-2 are neither stimulators nor targets these results suggest that the T-cell receptor recognizes TNP-modified H-2 antigens simply as nonself-H-2. Thus hapten coupling of syngeneic cells appears to lead to a histocompatibility antigen change similar to the situation in an allogeneic cytotoxic reaction. Experiments are presented which support this view showing that TNP-coupled and uncoupled syngeneic or allogeneic stimulator and target cells cross-react. For instance allogeneic sensitization may lead to killing on TNP-coupled targets syngeneic to the effector cells and TNP-coupled stimulator cells syngeneic to the effector cells may induce killing on uncoupled syngeneic targets. TNP-dependent cytotoxicity can therefore be envisaged as a kind of allogeneic reactivity due to modification of H-2 antigens by the TNP coupling. This conclusion may have bearing on other model systems in which syngeneic killing appears to be H-2 restricted. In support of this possibility it is shown that allogeneic sensitization may lead to priming of memory cells able to respond to minor histocompatibility antigens.
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