Abstract
Abstract In vivo and in vitro, murine peripheral T cells can suppress or "veto" the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes directed against antigens presented by those T cells. This suppression is antigen-specific and H-2-restricted. The recognition event initiating this suppression appears to be unidirectional; precursors of cytotoxic T lymphocytes recognize the antigen-bearing veto cell and are thereby inactivated--the veto cell need not recognize the CTL precursor. We show here that 3/3 cytolytic T cell clones can exert veto activity in vitro on normal spleen cells which do not bear antigens the T cell clones can recognize. This suppression results in greatly diminished cytotoxic activity generated during a primary 5-day mixed lymphocyte culture against antigens which the veto cell expresses, but not against third-party antigens present in the same culture. In this same system, a noncytolytic T cell clone will not serve as a source of veto cells. Secondary cytotoxic responses are relatively resistant to the veto cell activity of cloned cytolytic T cells. The cloned veto cells do not suppress the generation of cytotoxic activity directed against antigens they recognize (and presumably carry over via antigen-specific receptors). Cold target competition during the cytotoxic assay has been eliminated as a possible mechanism for T cell clone-induced suppression, and suppression cannot be reversed by the addition to the mixed lymphocyte cultures of supernatants from concanavalin A-activated spleen cells. It is suggested that this mechanism of inactivating primary cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses could play an important role in the maintenance of self-tolerance and in the induction and maintenance of tolerance to allografts.
Dates
Type | When |
---|---|
Created | 2 years, 8 months ago (Dec. 30, 2022, 11:53 p.m.) |
Deposited | 5 months ago (March 31, 2025, 10:40 p.m.) |
Indexed | 2 months ago (June 27, 2025, 9:46 a.m.) |
Issued | 40 years, 11 months ago (Oct. 1, 1984) |
Published | 40 years, 11 months ago (Oct. 1, 1984) |
Published Online | 40 years, 11 months ago (Oct. 1, 1984) |
Published Print | 40 years, 11 months ago (Oct. 1, 1984) |
@article{Fink_1984, title={Cloned cytolytic T cells can suppress primary cytotoxic responses directed against them.}, volume={133}, ISSN={1550-6606}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.133.4.1775}, DOI={10.4049/jimmunol.133.4.1775}, number={4}, journal={The Journal of Immunology}, publisher={Oxford University Press (OUP)}, author={Fink, P J and Rammensee, H G and Bevan, M J}, year={1984}, month=oct, pages={1775–1781} }