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  • Title: In vivo functional clonal deletion of recipient CD4+ T helper precursor cells that can recognize class II MHC on injected donor lymphoid cells.
    Author: Kiziroglu F, Miller RG.
    Journal: J Immunol; 1991 Feb 15; 146(4):1104-12. PubMed ID: 1671401.
    Abstract:
    Intravenous injection of semiallogeneic (C57BL/6XDBA/2)F1 lymphocytes into adult C57BL/6 recipient mice not only, as previously reported, reduces the recipients' cytotoxic T lymphocyte response in a subsequent in vitro mixed lymphocyte reaction against the injected cell type, but also reduces Th cell function in the same MLR. Thus lymphoid cells derived from the injected mice were greatly reduced in their ability to proliferate and to produce IL-2 in response to (C57BL/6XDBA/2)F1 stimulator cells in vitro, whereas third party responses were unaffected. This appears to be due to a reduction in the precursor frequency of IL-2-producing T lymphocytes specific for the injected cells as measured by limiting dilution analysis. Similar donor-specific reduction in the frequency of precursors of IL-2-producing cells was seen after i.v. injection of A.TL lymphocytes into A.TH recipients (differing at class II determinants I-A and I-E, but identical at K and D). Here there also appeared to be a functional clonal deletion of precursors of IL-2-producing Th cells, shown directly to be class II MHC reactive and CD4+. There is strong evidence that the reduction of class I-specific cytotoxic responses in the injected mice is a manifestation of donor cells that function as veto cells, i.e., that function as deletional APC that inactivate class I-reactive CTL precursors that recognize them. Our data in this study show that class II-specific Th responses are similarly reduced in the injected mice and suggest that CD4+ class II-reactive precursors of Th cells may be functionally inactivated in vivo by donor cells via a veto-like mechanism.
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