Concomitant Induction and Persistence of Hapten‐Specific Suppressor and Helper T Cells in Vivo
- 1 October 1984
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Scandinavian Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 20 (4) , 339-347
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3083.1984.tb01011.x
Abstract
Intravenous injection of haptenized syngeneic lymphoid cells in the mouse induced a suppression in vivo against any immunogen carrying this hapten, introduced as a second antigen. Suppression was observed against any epitope on such a haptenized immunogen, thus largely excluding cross-reactions at the level of antigen-binding or idiotypy. However, when cells from such suppressed mice were assessed in vitro, it could be shown that significant T-helper activity had been induced by the same procedure, which in vivo resulted in suppression only. Thus, concomitant induction and persistence of hapten-specific suppressor and helper T cells is a result of the present immunization protocol. Both phenomena express the conventional requirements for physical linkage between hapten and immunogen to have an impact on the antibody response against the epitopes of the carrier. It is thus likely that the observed suppression/help in the present system does function at the level of handling the intact immunogen.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epitope-specific regulation. II. A bistable, Igh-restricted regulatory mechanism central to immunologic memoryThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982
- Epitope-specific regulation. I. Carrier-specific induction of suppression for IgG anti-hapten antibody responsesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1982
- Carrier-priming leads to hapten-specific suppressionNature, 1980
- Hapten‐specific helper T cells. I. Collaboration with B cells to which the hapten has been directly coupledEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1980
- Antigen-specific T cell-mediated suppression. V. H-2-linked genetic control of distinct antigen-specific defects in the production and activity of L-glutamic acid50-L-tyrosine50 suppressor factor.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1980
- Antigen- and receptor-driven regulatory mechanisms. IV. Idiotype-bearing I-J+ suppressor T cell factors induce second-order suppressor T cells which express anti-idiotypic receptors.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1980
- Cellular consequences in the suppression of antibody response by the antigen-specific T-cell factor.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1980
- Immunoregulatory circuits among T-cell sets. I. T-helper cells induce other T-cell sets to exert feedback inhibition.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- Immunosuppressive factors from lymphoid cells of nonresponder mice primed with L-glutamic acid60-L-alanine30-L-tyrosine10. IV. Lack of strain restrictions among allogeneic, nonresponder donors and recipients.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- Plaque Formation in Agar by Single Antibody-Producing CellsScience, 1963