An IL 2-secreting T cell hybridoma that responds to a self class I histocompatibility antigen in the H-2D region.

Abstract
A self-reactive T cell hybridoma that secretes IL-2 in response to H-2d haplotype cells resulted from a fusion of BALB/cBy lymph node cells with the AKR thymoma BW5147. The lymph node cells used had been enriched for cells reactive to (TG)-A--L, but neither this antigen nor fetal calf serum were required for stimulation of the hybridoma designated 3DT52.5. The gene product responsible for stimulation mapped to the H-2D region. Allogeneic cells of the b, f, k, q, and s haplotypes failed to stimulate. Not all H-2d haplotype cells were effective stimulators of 3DT52.5. Peritoneal cells and splenic B cells were much more stimulatory than splenic T cells. Most tumor cell lines of H-2d derivation and of B cell or macrophage/monocyte lineage were stimulatory, whereas H-2d T cell lines were not. The capacity to stimulate 3DT52.5 did not correlate with the ability to stimulate I region-restricted hybridomas, or with the ability to be induced to stimulate such hybridomas. Stimulatory cell lines did not apparently produce a soluble factor required for stimulation, and negative cell lines were not inhibitory. The monoclonal antibody 27-11-13, which reacts with H-2D of the b, d, and q haplotypes, inhibited stimulation of 3DT52.5 but did not inhibit stimulation of the sibling hybridoma 3DT18.11, which responds to (TG)-A--L plus I-Ad. Conversely, the monoclonal anti-I-Ad antibody MK-D6 inhibited stimulation of 3DT18.11 but not 3DT52.5. Although it is clear that 3DT52.5 recognizes a class I antigen coded for in the H-2D region, the precise molecular nature of the antigen is unknown. The structure of the antigen receptor on this hybridoma may prove to be of interest when it can be compared with receptors found on T cell hybridomas restricted by class II histocompatibility antigens.

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