Shaw S, Luce G E
J Immunol. 1987 Aug 15;139(4):1037-45.
Human cytotoxic T lymphocyte clones form conjugates with both antigen-positive and antigen-negative lymphoblastoid cells. Conjugates with antigen-negative targets form as rapidly, and are almost as frequent, as those with antigen-positive targets; both types are strong. Monoclonal antibodies against lymphocyte function-associated antigen (LFA)-1, CD2, and LFA-3 (or their Fab fragments) each consistently inhibit conjugate formation, but only partially; mixes of alpha LFA-1 with either CD2 monoclonal antibodies or alpha LFA-3 cause complete inhibition. Our previous studies have demonstrated two distinct pathways of antigen-independent conjugate (AIC) formation, one involving LFA-1 and the other involving CD2/LFA-3. The present studies showing supra-additive inhibition with mixes of Fab indicate that at least a major fraction of the conjugates involve T cells which utilize both pathways. Preincubation studies (and restricted expression for CD2) demonstrate that in the CD2/LFA-3 pathway, CD2 is critical on the effector and LFA-3 on the target and that in the LFA-1 pathway, LFA-1 is critical on the effector. Analysis of conjugate formation by primary allosensitized T cells confirms the critical findings made with T cell clones. Among a panel of antigen-negative "target" cell lines tested, there is wide variation in the number of AIC formed with cytotoxic T lymphocyte clones; this variation correlates partially with differences in level of expression of LFA-3. Both pathways of adhesion are utilized in AIC formation with all five targets tested, but there was variation between targets in the relative contribution by each pathway. Studies of inhibition of lysis (rather than conjugate formation) support the relevance of the two-pathway model to the lytic process as a whole. These studies demonstrate the general involvement of two pathways of adhesion in human T cell interactions: one involving T cell LFA-1 and the other involving T cell CD2 binding to target cell LFA-3.
人细胞毒性T淋巴细胞克隆可与抗原阳性和抗原阴性的淋巴母细胞形成结合物。与抗原阴性靶细胞形成的结合物与与抗原阳性靶细胞形成的结合物一样迅速,且几乎一样常见;两种类型都很强。针对淋巴细胞功能相关抗原(LFA)-1、CD2和LFA-3的单克隆抗体(或其Fab片段)均持续抑制结合物形成,但只是部分抑制;αLFA-1与CD2单克隆抗体或αLFA-3的混合物可导致完全抑制。我们之前的研究已证明抗原非依赖性结合物(AIC)形成有两条不同途径,一条涉及LFA-1,另一条涉及CD2/LFA-3。目前的研究表明,Fab混合物具有超相加抑制作用,这表明至少大部分结合物涉及同时利用两条途径的T细胞。预孵育研究(以及CD2的限制性表达)表明,在CD2/LFA-3途径中,CD2在效应细胞上起关键作用,LFA-3在靶细胞上起关键作用;而在LFA-1途径中,LFA-1在效应细胞上起关键作用。对初次同种异体致敏T细胞结合物形成的分析证实了用T细胞克隆得出的关键发现。在所测试的一组抗原阴性“靶”细胞系中,与细胞毒性T淋巴细胞克隆形成的AIC数量存在很大差异;这种差异部分与LFA-3表达水平的差异相关。在与所测试的所有五个靶细胞形成AIC的过程中,两种黏附途径均被利用,但各途径的相对贡献在不同靶细胞之间存在差异。对裂解(而非结合物形成)抑制的研究支持了双途径模型与整个裂解过程的相关性。这些研究表明,两条黏附途径普遍参与人T细胞相互作用:一条涉及T细胞LFA-1,另一条涉及T细胞CD2与靶细胞LFA-3结合。