Little J A, Asherson G L
Division of Immunological Medicine, Clinical Research Centre, Harrow.
Immunology. 1987 Nov;62(3):445-50.
Antigen-specific T-helper factor (ThF) bears I-A determinants and is I-A restricted in its action. This I-A restriction may be explained by ThF binding, and hence approximating antigen to its own I-A determinants, thereby facilitating recognition by the T cell (I-A presentation theory), or by a recognition site for I-A on the ThF which approximates the antigen to I-A+ antigen-presenting cells (I-A recognition theory). When ThF is produced in F1 mice there may be a dissociation between the I-A phenotype of the ThF and the I-A restriction of any recognition site for I-A. In practice, ThF is made by spleen cells from (CBA x B10)F1 [(H-2k x H-2d)F1] mice pretreated with cyclophosphamide (100 mg/kg) and immunized with picrylated parental spleen cells intravenously (3 x 10(7)). This procedure produces haplotype-restricted contact sensitivity (corresponding to the parental cells) but the unfractionated F1 ThF does not show haplotype-specific restriction in its action. In fact, the F1 mice produces two species of ThF, each bearing determinants of the I-A molecule of one parental haplotype (k or d). When the two species were separated with monoclonal anti-I-Ak and anti-I-Ad antibodies, the genetic restriction in their action corresponded to the phenotype of the I-A determinants that they carried. In a further experiment, F1 ThF was split into its constituent antigen-binding (Ag+) and antigen non-binding (Ag-) chains by reduction, and the two species of Ag- chains separated with monoclonal anti-I-A antibodies. After complementation with the Ag+ chain, the two species of Ag- chains showed genetic restriction in their action that corresponded to the phenotype of the I-A determinants that they carried. These findings support the I-A presentation hypothesis that antigen-specific ThF acts by approximating antigen to its own I-A determinants, and hence facilitates recognition by I-A-restricted T cells.
抗原特异性T辅助因子(ThF)带有I-A决定簇,且其作用受I-A限制。这种I-A限制可以通过ThF结合来解释,即ThF使抗原接近自身的I-A决定簇,从而促进T细胞识别(I-A呈递理论),或者通过ThF上I-A的识别位点,该位点使抗原接近I-A+抗原呈递细胞(I-A识别理论)。当ThF在F1小鼠中产生时,ThF的I-A表型与I-A任何识别位点的I-A限制之间可能存在解离。实际上,ThF由经环磷酰胺(100mg/kg)预处理并经静脉注射苦味酸标记的亲代脾细胞(3×10⁷)免疫的(CBA×B10)F1[(H-2k×H-2d)F1]小鼠的脾细胞产生。此程序产生单倍型限制的接触敏感性(与亲代细胞相对应),但未分离的F1 ThF在其作用中未显示单倍型特异性限制。事实上,F1小鼠产生两种ThF,每种都带有一个亲代单倍型(k或d)的I-A分子决定簇。当用单克隆抗I-Ak和抗I-Ad抗体分离这两种ThF时,它们作用中的遗传限制与它们所携带的I-A决定簇的表型相对应。在进一步的实验中,F1 ThF通过还原被裂解为其组成的抗原结合(Ag+)链和抗原非结合(Ag-)链,并且用单克隆抗I-A抗体分离两种Ag-链。在用Ag+链互补后,两种Ag-链在其作用中显示出与它们所携带的I-A决定簇的表型相对应的遗传限制。这些发现支持I-A呈递假说,即抗原特异性ThF通过使抗原接近其自身的I-A决定簇来发挥作用,从而促进I-A限制的T细胞的识别。