Shevach E M, Rosenthal A S
J Exp Med. 1973 Nov 1;138(5):1213-29. doi: 10.1084/jem.138.5.1213.
A number of recent studies have suggested that the main functional role of the product of the immune response (Ir) genes is in the process of antigen recognition by the T lymphocyte. The observation in the accompanying report that the interaction of macrophage-associated antigen with immune T lymphocytes requires that both cells share histocompatibility antigens raised the question as to whether the macrophage played a role in the genetic control of the immune response or even if the macrophage were the primary cell in which the product of the Ir gene is expressed. In the current study, parental macrophages were pulsed with an antigen, the response to which is controlled by an Ir gene lacking in that parent; these macrophages were then mixed with T cells derived from the (nonresponder x responder)F(1) and the resultant stimulation was measured. No stimulation was seen when column-purified F(1) lymph node lymphocytes were mixed with antigen-pulsed macrophages from the nonresponder parent. However, when the highly reactive peritoneal exudate lymphocyte population was used as the indicator cells, parental macrophages pulsed with an antigen whose Ir gene they lacked were capable of initiating F(1) T-cell proliferation. The magnitude of stimulation was approximately 1/10 that seen when macrophages from either the responder parent or the F(1) were used. In order to explain this observation, we hypothesize that antigen recognition sites on the T lymphocyte are physically related to a macrophage-binding site and both are linked to the serologically determined histocompatibility antigens. Thus, parental macrophages pulsed with an antigen, whose Ir gene they lack, activate F(1) cells poorly because the recognition sites for the antigen are physically related to the macrophage-binding site of the responder parent while the main contacts between the cells are at the nonresponder binding sites. Experiments performed with alloantisera lend support to this hypothesis. Thus, when parental macrophages are pulsed with any antigen and added to F(1) T cells, an alloantiserum directed against parental histocompatibility antigens reacts with both the lymphocyte and the macrophage and thereby inhibits macrophage-lymphocyte interaction and abolishes antigen-induced lymphocyte transformation. When the alloantisera are directed at determinants present solely on the T lymphocyte, they only inhibit the recognition of antigens controlled by the Ir gene linked to the histocompatibility antigen against which they are directed. We conclude from these studies that antigen recognition by the T lymphocyte is a complex multicellular event involving more than simple antigen binding to a specific lymphocyte receptor.
最近的一些研究表明,免疫反应(Ir)基因产物的主要功能作用在于T淋巴细胞识别抗原的过程。附带报告中的观察结果显示,巨噬细胞相关抗原与免疫T淋巴细胞的相互作用要求两种细胞共享组织相容性抗原,这就提出了一个问题,即巨噬细胞是否在免疫反应的基因控制中发挥作用,或者巨噬细胞是否就是表达Ir基因产物的主要细胞。在当前的研究中,用一种抗原对亲代巨噬细胞进行脉冲处理,该抗原的反应受该亲代所缺乏的Ir基因控制;然后将这些巨噬细胞与源自(无反应者×有反应者)F(1)的T细胞混合,并测量由此产生的刺激。当将柱纯化的F(1)淋巴结淋巴细胞与来自无反应者亲代的抗原脉冲巨噬细胞混合时,未观察到刺激。然而,当使用高反应性的腹腔渗出液淋巴细胞群体作为指示细胞时,用其缺乏Ir基因的抗原进行脉冲处理的亲代巨噬细胞能够引发F(1) T细胞增殖。刺激的程度约为使用来自有反应者亲代或F(1)的巨噬细胞时所观察到的刺激程度的1/10。为了解释这一观察结果,我们假设T淋巴细胞上的抗原识别位点与巨噬细胞结合位点在物理上相关,并且两者都与血清学确定的组织相容性抗原相连。因此,用其缺乏Ir基因的抗原进行脉冲处理的亲代巨噬细胞对F(1)细胞的激活效果不佳,因为抗原的识别位点与有反应者亲代的巨噬细胞结合位点在物理上相关,而细胞之间的主要接触发生在无反应者的结合位点。用同种抗血清进行的实验支持了这一假设。因此,当用任何抗原对亲代巨噬细胞进行脉冲处理并添加到F(1) T细胞中时,针对亲代组织相容性抗原的同种抗血清会与淋巴细胞和巨噬细胞发生反应,从而抑制巨噬细胞 - 淋巴细胞相互作用并消除抗原诱导的淋巴细胞转化。当同种抗血清针对仅存在于T淋巴细胞上的决定簇时,它们只会抑制由与它们所针对的组织相容性抗原相关的Ir基因控制的抗原的识别。我们从这些研究中得出结论,T淋巴细胞对抗原的识别是一个复杂的多细胞事件,涉及的不仅仅是简单的抗原与特定淋巴细胞受体的结合。