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1.
Subsets of lymphoid cells that function in the initiation and differentiation of cell-mediated responses to H-2-coded alloantigens were defined with an antiserum raised between congenic resistant lines of mice that differed for a limited number of components of the H-2 complex. Only those cells that express "Ia markers" can stimulate responses to H-2K, D and/or I region antigens in mixed lymphoid cell cultures, even though all lymphoid cells apparently express the H-2K and H-2D-coded private antigens. Ia markers, therefore, serve to distinguish the subset of cells which includes as its members the stimulating cells. The Ia marker(s) is expressed on the cell membrane of at least one of the two T cell subsets that collaborate in the development of T effector cells to H-2-associated alloantigens, i.e. precursors and helpers. The cells remaining after lysis with our antiserum plus complement no longer can respond in the MLR. Syngeneic non-T cells cannot reconstitute the response. Most activated and proliferating cells express the Ia determinant(s). A proportion of T effector or killer cells, however, does not express the Ia markers. We suggest, therefore, that the MLR-responsive cell in normal lymph nodes is an "activated" cell and the "Ia markers" are involved in the differentiation of T precursor to T effector cells. The end stage T effector probably is devoid of the Ia marker.  相似文献   

2.
To determine the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction of the T/B cell interaction involved in a negative regulation of Ig production, we used mouse model of T cell-induced IgG2ab suppression in vivo. Normal or specifically triggered T splenocytes from mice of the Igha haplotype, when neonatally transferred into histocompatible Igha/b heterozygotes, are able to induce a specific and total suppression of the IgG2ab allotype. Nevertheless, only transfer of IgG2ab-primed Igha T splenocytes induces this suppression in Ighb/b homozygous congenic mice in which the whole IgG2a isotype production is inhibited. This suppression is chronically maintained by CD8+ T cells, but can be experimentally reversed. We have established that the suppression induction required a CD4+CD8+ T cell cooperation and operated via the recognition by the involved TCR of Cγ2ab-derived peptides presented by the target B cells in an MHC haplotype-restricted manner. Here, by using Ighb mice genetically deficient for MHC class I (β2-microglobulin%, or β2m%) or class II (I-Aβ%) molecules, we demonstrate functionally that the suppression induction implicates an MHC class I-, but not class II-restricted interaction. Indeed, the anti-IgG2ab T cells transferred into Ighb H-2b I-Aβ% mice carry out the suppression process normally, while in Ighb H-2b β2m% recipients, their suppression induction capacity is significantly inhibited. Moreover, the Cγ2ab 103–118 peptide, identified as the sole Cγ2ab-derived peptide able to amplify the anti-IgG2ab T cell reactivity in Igha H-2b mice, is also able to stabilize the H-2Db, but not the H-2Kb class I molecules at the surface of RMA-S (TAP2?, H-2b) cells. These results indicate that, despite the CD4+/CD8+ T cell cooperation during the induction phase of suppression only MHC class I molecule expression is required at the surface of IgG2ab+ B cells for suppression establishment.  相似文献   

3.
It is still controversial whether malaria protection is mediated by conventional immunity associated with T and B cells or by innate immunity associated with extrathymic T cells and autoantibody-producing B cells. Given this situation, it is important to examine the mechanism of malaria protection in beta(2)-microglobulin-deficient (beta(2)m(-/-)) mice. These mice lack major histocompatibility complex class I and CD1d antigens, which results in the absence of CD8(+) T cells and natural killer T (NKT) cells. When C57BL/6 and beta(2)m(-/-) mice were injected with parasitized (Plasmodium yoelii 17XNL) erythrocytes, both survived from the infection and showed a similar level of parasitaemia. The major expanding T cells were NK1.1(-) alphabeta T-cell receptor(int) cells in both mice. The difference was a compensatory expansion of NK and gammadelta T cells in beta(2)m(-/-) mice, and an elimination experiment showed that these lymphocytes were critical for protection in these mice. These results suggest that malaria protection might be events of the innate immunity associated with multiple subsets with autoreactivity. CD8(+) T and NKT cells may be partially related to this protection.  相似文献   

4.
A mouse monoclonal antibody (mAb) to the rat interleukin-2 receptor β (IL-2Rβ) chain was generated using IL-2Rβ cDNA-transfected mouse L929 cells for immunization and differential screening. This antibody, called L316, detects a cell surface protein with an apparent molecular mass of about 80 kDa. In peripheral lymphoid organs of young adult rats, IL-2Rβ expression is restricted to T and natural killer (NK) cells, and less than 10% of IL-2Rβ+ cells co-express the IL-2Rα chain. IL-2Rβ was detected on all NKRP-1hi (NK) and NKRP-1lo cells (T-lineage cells of unknown function), most peripheral γδ T cells and on 30–40% of CD8 and 10% of CD4 αβ T cells. In the adult rat thymus, mAb L316 detects a small subset (about 1%) of predominantly IL-2Rα cells which express cell surface markers characteristic of mature T lymphocytes and contain a high proportion of CD48 and CD48+ αβ T cell receptor (TCR)+ thymocytes. TCR-V usage suggests that major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I plays a more important role than MHC class II in the selection of these cells. On immature CD4+8+ rat thymocytes, IL-2Rβ cell surface expression is readily induced by TCR stimulation in vitro, supporting the idea that in vivo, the IL-2Rβ+ phenotype is the result of TCR engagement during thymic selection.  相似文献   

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