Capacity of unprimed CD4+ and CD8+ T cells expressing V beta 11 receptors to respond to I-E alloantigens in vivo.
Open Access
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 170 (6) , 1947-1957
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.170.6.1947
Abstract
Self tolerance induction in the thymus is known to delete T cells expressing certain V beta TCR molecules. In particular, V beta 17a+ and V beta 11+ T cells are selectively deleted in mice expressing H-2 I-E molecules. Although this finding implies that V beta 17a+ and V beta 11+ T cells have specificity for self I-E molecules, studies with V beta 11+ hybridomas prepared from mature lymphocytes taken from I-E- mice have shown that the vast majority of these hybridomas do not display I-E alloreactivity, at least in vitro. To examine whether V beta 11+ T cells are capable of reacting to I-E antigens in vivo, normal unprimed T cells from I-E- B10.A(4R) mice were transferred to irradiated I-E+ B10.A(2R) hosts and harvested from thoracic duct lymph of the recipients at various intervals. The donor T cells recovered in early lymph collections showed no reactivity to the I-E antigens of the host in vitro, presumably as a reflection of selective sequestration of the host-reactive cells in the lymphoid organs. Significantly, the disappearance of functional host-reactive cells from TDL was paralleled by a 90-95% reduction of V beta 11+ CD4+ cells. Blast cells were rare in early lymph collections but accounted for nearly all of the lymph-borne cells by day 3 after transfer. These blast cell populations contained a surprisingly high proportion of V beta 11+ cells, i.e., up to 25% in some experiments. Interestingly, the enrichment for V beta 11+ cells in the blast populations applied to CD8+ cells as well as to CD4+ cells. Collectively, the data suggest that in marked contrast to the failure of V beta 11+ cells to respond to I-E antigens in vitro, a high proportion of normal resting V beta 11+ cells are capable of reacting to I-E alloantigens in vivo.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- The T cell receptor Vβ6 domain imparts reactivity to the Mls-1a antigenCellular Immunology, 1989
- The MHC molecule I-E is necessary but not sufficient for the clonal deletion of V beta 11-bearing T cells.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1989
- Diabetes and tolerance in transgenic mice expressing class II MHC molecules in pancreatic beta cellsCell, 1988
- T cell tolerance by clonal elimination in the thymusCell, 1987
- A T cell receptor Vβ segment that imparts reactivity to a class II major histocompatibility complex productCell, 1987
- Relationship among function, phenotype, and specificity in primary allospecific T cell populations: identification of phenotypically identical but functionally distinct primary T cell subsets that differ in their recognition of MHC class I and class II allodeterminants.The Journal of Immunology, 1987
- Function and Specificity of T Cell Subsets in the MousePublished by Elsevier ,1987
- IgG or IgM monoclonal antibodies reactive with different determinants on the molecular complex bearing Lyt 2 antigen block T cell-mediated cytolysis in the absence of complement.The Journal of Immunology, 1980
- Activation of Thymus Cells by Histocompatibility AntigensNature New Biology, 1971
- Specific Unresponsiveness of Recirculating Lymphocytes after Exposure to Histocompatibility Antigen in F1 Hybrid RatsNature New Biology, 1971