160 research outputs found

    Protective Immunity Does Not Correlate with the Hierarchy of  Virus-specific Cytotoxic T Cell Responses to Naturally Processed Peptides

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    Infection of C57BL/6 mice with lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) stimulates major histocompatibility complex class I–restricted cytotoxic T cells (CTLs), which normally resolve the infection. Three peptide epitopes derived from LCMV have been shown to bind the mouse class I molecule H-2 Db and to stimulate CTL responses in LCMV-infected mice. This report describes the identity and abundance of each CTL epitope after their elution from LCMV-infected cells. Based on this information, peptide abundance was found to correlate with the magnitude of each CTL response generated after infection with LCMV. Subsequent experiments, performed to determine the antiviral capacity of each CTL specificity, indicate that the quantitative hierarchy of CTL activity does not correlate with the ability to protect against LCMV infection. This report, therefore, indicates that immunodominant epitopes should be defined, not only by the strength of the CTL response that they stimulate, but also by the ability of the CTLs to protect against infection

    Thymocytes can tolerize thymocytes by clonal deletion in vitro

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    Clonal deletion of thymocytes bearing TCR for self antigens is one major mechanism of T cell tolerance induction. Peptide antigen-induced deletion of thymocytes from αβ TCR transgenic mice has been studied using single cell suspension cultures. The results show that antigen-presenting immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes can tolerize antigen-reactive immature thymocytes in vitro by programmed cell death (apoptosis) 6-8 h after antigen exposure. Antigen-induced apoptosis of immature thymocytes was inhibited by antibodies specific for the αβ TCR, CD3, CD8, and LFA-1 molecules. This implies that clonal elimination of self-reactive CD4+CD8+ thymocytes does not depend on specialized deleting cell types in the thymus and occurs whenever the TCR of immature thymocytes bind antigen fragments presented by MHC molecule

    Impairment of Cd4+ T Cell Responses during Chronic Virus Infection Prevents Neutralizing Antibody Responses against Virus Escape Mutants

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    We have shown previously that neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) are important contributors to the long-term immune control of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection, particularly if cytotoxic T cell responses are low or absent. Nevertheless, virus escape from the nAb response due to mutations within the surface glycoprotein gene may subsequently allow the virus to persist. Here we show that most of the antibody-escape viral mutants retain their immunogenicity. We present evidence that the failure of the infected host to mount effective humoral responses against emerging neutralization-escape mutants correlates with the rapid loss of CD4+ T cell responsiveness during the establishment of viral persistence. Similar mechanisms may contribute to the persistence of some human pathogens such as hepatitis B and C viruses, and human immunodeficiency virus

    Enhanced positive selection of a transgenic TCR by a restriction element that does not permit negative selection

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    Very little is known about the conformational properties of the MHC molecules that are able to signal positive selection of a given TCR. To try to understand these parameters and to determine whether these requirements are shared with interactions during negative selection and antigen recognition, we have studied selection and antigen recognition of a transgenic TCR (specific for lymphocytic choriomeningitls virus glycoprotein and H-2Db) in the context of two Db mutants, H-2bm13 and H-2bm14. The data showed that the transgenic TCR was not positively selected by the H-2bm14 haplotype but, interestingly, enhanced positive selection was seen in H-2bm13 mice. The transgenic TCR could not be negatively selected In H-2bm13animals persistently infected with the virus (neonatal virus carrier mice), nor could the transgenic TCR be activated by H-2bm13 infected cells in vivo or in vitro. These experiments show that although a TCR may be selected by a mutant MHC molecule, the corresponding viral antigen cannot be recognized in the context of the mutant MHC molecule, as Judged by both negative selection and T cell reactivity in vivo and in vitro. The ‘enhanced' positive selection occurring in the context of Dbm13 suggests that a different conformation of the MHC molecule is able to select the same TCR and also that various TCR-ligand avidities may permit positive selectio

    Peptide Antigen Treatment of Naive and Virus-Immune Mice: Antigen-Specific Tolerance Versus Immunopathology

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    AbstractPeptide-specific down-regulation of T cell responses may represent a powerful tool to intervene in autoimmune diseases or graft rejections. It is therefore important to know whether peptide treatment tolerizes both naive and antigen-experienced memory T lymphocytes. Here we show that a major histocompatibility complex class I binding peptide, derived from the glycoprotein (GP33 peptide) of lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV), specifically tolerized naive cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) when administered three times intraperitoneally in incomplete Freund's adjuvants. However, in the presence of GP33-specific memory CTL in LCMV-primed mice, the same treatment had a general immunosuppressive effect on unrelated third-party antigen-specific T cell responses and caused severe immunopathological damage to the spleen
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