A Murine Anti-Sheep T8 Monoclonal Antibody, ST-8, that Defines the Cytotoxic T Lymphocyte Population

Abstract
A mouse monoclonal antibody (mAb), ST-8, reactive with a subpopulation of sheep T lymphocytes was investigated by tissue distribution analysis and functional studies of the antigen-bearing (ST-8+) cells. Two other mouse mAb, ST-1 and T-80 that recognize all sheep T cells and a T-cell subset, respectively, were also examined for comparison. The ST-8+ cells represented 61–69% of thymocytes and about 10–30% of peripheral T lymphocytes. Histologically, ST-8+ cells were found mainly in the thymic cortex, T-dependent areas of the peripheral lymphoid tissues and the splenic red pulp and marginal zone, but not in B-dependent areas such as germinal centers of lymph follicles of the Peyer’s patches. ST-8 mAb plus complement treatment completely abolished both the induction phase and the effector phase of alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes but did not affect proliferative responses to T-dependent mitogens and allogeneic antigens. ST-8 mAb also blocked the cytotoxic T lymphocyte function of lysing specific targets in the absence of complement. ST-8 mAb immunoprecipitated an antigen from the surface of sheep T lymphocytes under reducing conditions with an apparent molecular weight of 33–35 kilodaltons. Therefore the antigen recognized by the ST-8 mAb showed striking similarities to human T8/Leu-2a and mouse Lyt-2 antigens not only in the tissue distribution and function of antigen-bearing cells but also the molecular weight. We conclude that the ST-8 antigen is the ovine homologue of the human T8 and mouse Lyt-2 antigens.