Crossref journal-article
Oxford University Press (OUP)
The Journal of Immunology (286)
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.

Bibliography

Fink, P. J., Rammensee, H. G., & Bevan, M. J. (1984). Cloned cytolytic T cells can suppress primary cytotoxic responses directed against them. The Journal of Immunology, 133(4), 1775–1781.

Authors 3
  1. P J Fink (first)
  2. H G Rammensee (additional)
  3. M J Bevan (additional)
References 0 Referenced 52

None

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)
Funders 0

None

@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} }