Inhibition of soluble antigen-induced T cell proliferation by warm-reactive antibodies to activated T cells in systemic lupus erythematosus.
Open Access
- 1 December 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 74 (6) , 1948-1960
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci111615
Abstract
One of the fundamental immunologic characteristics of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a depressed T cell proliferative response to various specific and nonspecific stimuli. Both intrinsic cellular defect(s) and inhibitory influences of humoral factors, e.g., antilymphocyte autoantibodies or immune complexes, have been postulated to underly this functional abnormality. Because patient serum can induce SLE-like T cell dysfunction in normal cells, an extrinsic mechanism is probably responsible, but the nature and site of action of this humoral activity has not been defined. This laboratory recently described a novel antibody specific for activated T cells in SLE, which raised the possibility that suppression of T cell proliferation by SLE serum involved antibodies directed to surface determinants expressed during the process of activation. In experiments to examine this concept further, relatively warm-reactive antibodies to T cell blasts were found to inhibit strongly the well-characterized T cell response to tetanus toxoid. These antibodies were distinct from conventional cold-reactive IgM antibodies to resting T cells, which exhibited little inhibitory activity. Inhibition involved noncytotoxic effects on early activation events at the level of the responding T cell, which markedly reduced the expression of receptors for interleukin 2. Inhibitory effects on antigen-pulsed macrophages or on T cells already committed to proliferate were not demonstrable. Anti-T blast antibodies were characteristic of active SLE and were detected only occasionally in patients with inactive disease or non-SLE rheumatic disorders. Although the exact antigenic specificity was not identified, considerable evidence was obtained against the presence of antibodies to Ia and certain other surface determinants of functional relevance. Our observations concerning the suppressive effects of anti-T blast antibodies in SLE serum on the T cell response to tetanus toxoid should provide new insight into mechanisms of in vivo T cell dysfunction in this and other immunologic disorders.This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human auto-antiidiotypes regulating T cell-mediated reactivity to tetanus toxoid.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1984
- Antigen presentation: comments on its regulation and mechanism.The Journal of Immunology, 1984
- Expression of receptors for interleukin 2: Role in the commitment of T lymphocytes to proliferate.The Journal of Immunology, 1984
- Class-II HLA Restriction of Antigen-Specific Human T-Lymphocyte Clones.Scandinavian Journal of Immunology, 1983
- Antigen-induced human T cell help. Precursor frequency, radiation sensitivity, and allogeneic effects.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1983
- Macrophage-dependent activation of antigen-specific T cells requires antigen and a soluble monokine.The Journal of Immunology, 1983
- Nature of cold‐reactive antibodies to lymphocyte surface determinants in systemic lupus erythematosusArthritis & Rheumatism, 1975
- THE KINETICS OF CELLULAR COMMITMENT DURING STIMULATION OF LYMPHOCYTES BY LECTINSThe Journal of cell biology, 1974
- A rapid method for the isolation of functional thymus‐derived murine lymphocytesEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1973
- ANTIBODIES TO A SPECIFIC SURFACE ANTIGEN OF T CELLS IN HUMAN SERA INHIBITING MIXED LEUKOCYTE CULTURE REACTIONSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1973