MHC class II tetramers identify peptide-specific human CD4+ T cells proliferating in response to influenza A antigen
Open Access
- 15 December 1999
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 104 (12) , R63-R67
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci8476
Abstract
Antigen-specific T helper cells present in peripheral blood at very low frequencies are capable of rapid clonal expansion during antigenic challenge. The exquisite specificity of this response provides for activation and expansion of a very select cohort of T cells, a feature we have used to directly identify and quantify human epitope-specific T helper cells from peripheral blood. Soluble tetramerized class II MHC molecules, loaded with an immunodominant peptide from hemagglutinin (HA) and labeled with fluorescent dyes, were constructed and used to directly identify antigen-specific T cells from influenza-immune individuals. After 7 days of proliferation in response to stimulation by HA peptide or whole influenza vaccine, cells staining positive with the HA tetramer had undergone between 6 and 9 divisions and were CD3+, CD4+, CD25+, and CD8–, characteristic of activated T helper cells responding to antigen. The HA epitope-specific component of the complex response to whole influenza vaccine represented a major subset of proliferating T helper cells. Soluble class II tetramers allow a direct approach for the analysis of immunodominant antigenic specificities. The identification of antigen-specific T helper cells in the peripheral blood provides a means for tracking the immune response against infectious agents and in autoimmune disease. This article may have been published online in advance of the print edition. The date of publication is available from the JCI website, http://www.jci.org. J. Clin. Invest.104:R63–R67 (1999).Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Use of Peptide Libraries to Map the Substrate Specificity of a Peptide-Modifying Enzyme: A 13 Residue Consensus Peptide Specifies Biotinylation in Escherichia coliNature Biotechnology, 1993
- Transgenic mice that express a myelin basic protein-specific T cell receptor develop spontaneous autoimmunityCell, 1993
- The human class II MHC protein HLA-DR1 assembles as empty αβ heterodimers in the absence of antigenic peptideCell, 1992
- Single amino acid changes in DR and antigen define residues critical for peptide-MHC binding and T cell recognition.The Journal of Immunology, 1991
- Alloreactive T-cell clones identify multiple HLA-DQw3 variantsHuman Immunology, 1991
- T-cell recognition of an immuno-dominant myelin basic protein epitope in multiple sclerosisNature, 1990
- GENE-SPLICING BY OVERLAP EXTENSION - TAILOR-MADE GENES USING THE POLYMERASE CHAIN-REACTION1990
- Universally immunogenic T cell epitopes: promiscuous binding to human MHC class II and promiscuous recognition by T cellsEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1989
- The generation of mature T cells requires interaction of the αβ T-cell receptor with major histocompatibility antigensNature, 1989
- Human T-cell clones recognize chemically synthesized peptides of influenza haemagglutininNature, 1982