Mittler R S, Greenfield R S, Schacter B Z, Richard N F, Hoffmann M K
J Immunol. 1987 May 15;138(10):3159-66.
T191, a monoclonal antibody reactive with the T200 common leukocyte antigen, profoundly inhibits an early event(s) associated with alpha-immunoglobulin M (alpha IgM)/T cell replacing factor (TRF) or alpha IgM/recombinant interleukin 1 and 2 (rIL 1 and rIL 2)-induced tonsillar B cell proliferation. Kinetic analysis of T191-mediated inhibition indicated that the antibody exerts its effect within 12 to 24 hr of the initiation of cultures and rapidly loses its activity thereafter. Small resting B cells are most sensitive to T191 inhibition, whereas B cells with increasing buoyant density (presumably reflecting stages of increased activation) become progressively T191 insensitive. Analysis of RNA synthesis subsequent to alpha IgM crosslinking of surface immunoglobulin demonstrated that T191 reduced [3H]uridine incorporation by up to 38% during the first 20 hr of culture. In contrast to the effects seen with alpha IgM stimulated B cells, T191 had no inhibitory effect upon phorbol myristate acetate-induced B cell proliferation. The inhibitory effect upon B cell proliferation observed with T191 is not unique among other alpha-T200 antibodies. Four of five previously described alpha-T200 monoclonal antibodies had similar inhibitory effects (82 to 57% maximum inhibition of [3H]thymidine incorporation). However, 13.3, an alpha-T200 monoclonal antibody previously shown to block natural killer (NK) cell-mediated killing was without effect. Likewise, those antibodies capable of inhibiting B cell proliferation failed to block NK-mediated cytolysis. Antibody binding experiments together with proliferation inhibition studies suggest that all of the monoclonal antibodies tested recognized distinct epitopes on the T200 antigen. Both observations are of significance because they demonstrate that the effects seen with anti-T200 antibodies represent an interference with highly specific functional regions on the T200 molecules.
T191是一种与T200共同白细胞抗原发生反应的单克隆抗体,它能显著抑制与α免疫球蛋白M(α IgM)/T细胞替代因子(TRF)或α IgM/重组白细胞介素1和2(rIL 1和rIL 2)诱导的扁桃体B细胞增殖相关的早期事件。对T191介导的抑制作用的动力学分析表明,该抗体在培养开始后的12至24小时内发挥作用,此后迅速失去活性。静止的小B细胞对T191的抑制最为敏感,而浮力密度增加的B细胞(可能反映激活程度增加的阶段)对T191逐渐不敏感。对表面免疫球蛋白进行α IgM交联后RNA合成的分析表明,在培养的前20小时内,T191使[3H]尿苷掺入量减少了38%。与α IgM刺激的B细胞所观察到的效应相反,T191对佛波酯肉豆蔻酸酯诱导的B细胞增殖没有抑制作用。T191对B细胞增殖的抑制作用在其他α - T200抗体中并非独一无二。先前描述的五种α - T200单克隆抗体中有四种具有类似的抑制作用([3H]胸苷掺入量的最大抑制率为82%至57%)。然而,先前已证明能阻断自然杀伤(NK)细胞介导杀伤作用的α - T200单克隆抗体13.3却没有效果。同样,那些能够抑制B细胞增殖的抗体也未能阻断NK介导的细胞溶解作用。抗体结合实验以及增殖抑制研究表明,所有测试的单克隆抗体都识别T200抗原上不同的表位。这两个观察结果都具有重要意义,因为它们表明抗T200抗体所观察到的效应代表了对T200分子上高度特异性功能区域的干扰。