Abstract: | In order to study the antigen-presenting cell (APC) requirements for the priming of delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH), murine spleen cells were fractionated on bovine serum albumin gradients, pulsed in vitro with tuberculin, and then injected subcutaneously into normal mice. The other footpad was challenged with tuberculin between 24 hr and 7 days later and swelling was measured 2 hr and 18-24 hr after challenge. Optimum priming for 2-hr and 24-hr responses at 7 days was achieved by an injection of 5 X 10(5) tuberculin-pulsed intermediate-density Fc + ve cells. Time-course studies revealed that the 2-hr component could be elicited as early as 24 hr after injection of pulsed APC, while the 24-hr component became significant at 3 days. Elimination of T cells or B cells did not affect the response. Injection of pulsed APC into allogeneic mice primed the 2-hr but not the 24-hr component. Neither pulsed high-density cells (mostly T cells) nor pulsed dendritic cells (DC) primed mice for these responses. Failure to elicit DTH after injection of tuberculin-pulsed DC was due to their failure to prime the 2-hr component, which other authors have shown to be a prerequisite for the appearance of the later components. That DC did prime the MHC-restricted 24-hr component was demonstrated by protocols involving the use of both macrophages and DC as APC. |