Sondel P M, Jacobson M W, Bach F H
J Exp Med. 1975 Dec 1;142(6):1606-11. doi: 10.1084/jem.142.6.1606.
The regulation of B-cell and T-cell immune responses has been extensively examined and in the experimental animal appears to involve regulatory or "suppressor" T cells (1-4). The limitations of in vitro experimentation have made comparable study of nonpathological human suppression quite difficult (5). We report here an in vitro method that generates and quantitates suppressor activity in man after antigen-specific activation in mixed leukocyte culture (MLC). The one-way MLC induces both a proliferative response (6) and the generation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) (7). Both of these responses are mediated by antigen-specific T-cell subpopulations (8,9) and have been correlated with recognitive and destructive phases of allograft rejection. Recent reports have examined the antigen reactivity of mouse (10,11), rat (12), or human (13,14) lymphocytes obtained after proliferation in MLC. In all cases, after the primary MLC proliferative peak, the recovered lymphocytes rapidly differentiate upon re-exposure to the initial stimulating population, but do so only weakly when exposed to a presumably noncross-reactive third-party stimulating population. Velocity sedimentation separation studies have shown that the blast cells produced in a primary MLC revert to small lymphocytes that rapidly differentiate into proliferating and/or cytotoxic T lymphocytes upon restimulation with the initial antigen (15). These findings demonstrate that positive selection for the responding population in primary MLC does exist and may account for at least part of the specificity of the secondary response. However, this positive selection does not preclude possible involvement of a suppressor mechanism. In fact we have detected suppressor activity in primary MLC sensitization cultures at a time when the proliferation responsible for positive selection does not preclude possible involvement of a suppressor mechanism. In fact we have detected suppressor activity in primary MLC sensitization cultures at a time when the proliferation responsible for positive selection in not yet significant, suggesting that suppression may be overriding importance in the specificity of MLC-activated secondary responses.
B细胞和T细胞免疫反应的调节已得到广泛研究,在实验动物中似乎涉及调节性或“抑制性”T细胞(1 - 4)。体外实验的局限性使得对非病理性人类抑制作用进行类似研究相当困难(5)。我们在此报告一种体外方法,该方法可在混合淋巴细胞培养(MLC)中进行抗原特异性激活后,在人体中产生并定量抑制活性。单向MLC可诱导增殖反应(6)和细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(CTLs)的产生(7)。这两种反应均由抗原特异性T细胞亚群介导(8,9),并与同种异体移植排斥反应的识别和破坏阶段相关。最近的报告研究了在MLC中增殖后获得的小鼠(10,11)、大鼠(12)或人类(13,14)淋巴细胞的抗原反应性。在所有情况下,在初次MLC增殖高峰后,回收的淋巴细胞在再次暴露于初始刺激群体时会迅速分化,但在暴露于可能无交叉反应的第三方刺激群体时,分化程度较弱。速度沉降分离研究表明,初次MLC中产生的母细胞会恢复为小淋巴细胞,这些小淋巴细胞在再次受到初始抗原刺激后会迅速分化为增殖性和/或细胞毒性T淋巴细胞(15)。这些发现表明,初次MLC中反应群体的阳性选择确实存在,并且可能至少部分解释了二次反应的特异性。然而,这种阳性选择并不排除抑制机制的可能参与。事实上,我们在初次MLC致敏培养物中检测到了抑制活性,此时负责阳性选择的增殖尚未显著,这表明抑制作用可能在MLC激活的二次反应特异性中具有至关重要的意义。