Phenotype, specificity, and function of T cell subsets and T cell interactions involved in skin allograft rejection.
Open Access
- 1 May 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 165 (5) , 1296-1315
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.165.5.1296
Abstract
In the present study we used an adoptive transfer model with athymic nude mice to characterize the T cells involved in initiating and mediating skin allograft rejection. It was found that skin allograft rejection in nude mice required the transfer of immunocompetent T cells and that such reconstitution did not itself stimulate the appearance of T cells derived from the nude host. Reconstitution with isolated populations of Lyt-2+/L3T4- T cells resulted in the rapid rejection of MHC class I-disparate skin allografts, whereas reconstitution with isolated populations of L3T4+/Lyt-2- T cells resulted in the rapid rejection of MHC class II-disparate and minor H-disparate skin allografts. By correlating these rejection responses with the functional capabilities of antigen-specific T cells contained within the reconstituting Lyt-2+ and L3T4+ T cell populations, it was noted that skin allografts were only rejected by mice that, as shown by in vitro assessment, contained both lymphokine-secreting Th cells and lymphokine-responsive Tk cells specific for the alloantigens of the graft. The ability of two such functionally distinct T cell subsets to interact in vivo to reject skin allografts was directly demonstrated in H-Y-specific rejection responses by taking advantage of the fact that H-Y-specific Th cells are L3T4+ while H-Y specific Tk cells are Lyt-2+. Finally, the importance of in vivo interactions between functionally distinct Th/T-inducer cells and T killer (Tk)/T-effector cells in skin allograft rejection was demonstrated by the observation that normal B6 mice retain Qala and Kbm6 skin allografts because of a selective deficiency in antigen-specific Th cells, even though they contain T-effector cells that, when activated, are able to reject such allografts. Thus, the ability to reject skin allografts is neither unique to a specialized subset of T cells with a given Lyt phenotype, nor unique to a specialized subset of helper-independent effector T cells with so-called dual function capability. Rather, skin allograft rejection can be mediated by in vivo collaborations between T-inducer cells and T-effector cells, and the two interacting T cell subsets can express different Lyt phenotypes as well as different antigen specificities.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lyt ANTIGENS ON THE T CELLS SPECIFIC FOR MINOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY ANTIGENS Suppression by a Lyt-l+2- RegulatorTransplantation, 1981
- Cells mediating graft rejection in the mouse. I. Lyt-1 cells mediate skin graft rejection.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1981
- Age-associated increase in expression of the T cell surface markers Thy-1, Lyt-1, and Lyt-2 in congenitally athymic (nu/nu) mice: analysis by flow microfluorometry.The Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Generation of effector cells from T cell subsets III. Synergy between Lyt‐1 and Lyt‐123/23 lymphocytes in the generation of H‐2‐restricted and alloreactive cytotoxid T cellsEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Fc (IgG) receptors on rat basophilic leukemia cells.The Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Cellular interactions in the generation of cytolytic T lymphocyte responses: role of Ia-positive splenic adherent cells in presentation in H-2 antigen.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1980
- B6.C-H-2bm12. A new H-2 mutation in the I region in the mouse.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1979
- Distinct Ir genes for helper and killer cells in the cytotoxic response to H-Y antigen.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1979
- Helper Cells Activated by Allogeneic H-2K or H-2D Differences Have a Ly Phenotype Distinct from Those Responsive to I DifferencesThe Journal of Immunology, 1979
- Rapid data collection, analysis, and graphics for flow microfluorometry instrumentationReview of Scientific Instruments, 1978