Rollins-Smith L A, Flajnik M F, Blair P J, Davis A T, Green W F
Department of Microbiology & Immunology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA.
Dev Immunol. 1997;5(2):133-44. doi: 10.1155/1997/38464.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a cluster of genes encoding products central to all major functions of the vertebrate immune system. Evidence for an MHC can be found in all vertebrate groups that have been examined except the jawless fishes. Expression of MHC class I and class II antigens early in ontogeny is critically important for development of T lymphocytes capable of discriminating self from nonself. Because of this essential role in T-cell development, the ontogeny of MHC expression in the South African clawed frog, Xenopus laevis, was studied. Previous studies of MHC class I expression in Xenopus laevis suggested that class I antigens are virtually absent from tadpole tissues until climax of metamorphosis. We therefore examined the possible role of thyroid hormones (TH) in the induction of class I. By flow cytometry, a small amount of class I expression was detectable on splenocytes and erythrocytes in untreated frogs at prometamorphic stages 55-58, and the amount increased significantly at the conclusion of metamorphic climax. Thus, metamorphosis is associated with increased intensity of class I expression. Neither inhibition nor acceleration of metamorphosis altered the timing of onset of class I expression. However, inhibition of metamorphosis prevented the increase in class I expression characteristic of adult cell populations. Because expression was not accelerated in TH-treated frogs or delayed in metamorphosis-inhibited frogs, it is unlikely that TH are the direct developmental cues that induce expression, although they seem to be required for the upregulation of class I expression occurring at metamorphosis. Differences in the pattern of expression in different sub-populations of cells suggest a complex pattern of regulation of expression of class I antigens during ontogeny.
主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)是一组基因,其编码的产物对于脊椎动物免疫系统的所有主要功能至关重要。除了无颌鱼类外,在所有已被研究的脊椎动物群体中都能找到MHC存在的证据。MHC I类和II类抗原在个体发育早期的表达对于能够区分自我与非自我的T淋巴细胞的发育至关重要。由于其在T细胞发育中的这一关键作用,对南非爪蟾(非洲爪蟾)MHC表达的个体发育进行了研究。先前对非洲爪蟾MHC I类表达的研究表明,直到变态高潮期,蝌蚪组织中几乎不存在I类抗原。因此,我们研究了甲状腺激素(TH)在I类诱导中的可能作用。通过流式细胞术,在变态前55 - 58阶段未处理的青蛙的脾细胞和红细胞上可检测到少量I类表达,并且在变态高潮结束时表达量显著增加。因此,变态与I类表达强度的增加相关。变态的抑制或加速均未改变I类表达开始的时间。然而,变态的抑制阻止了成年细胞群体特有的I类表达增加。由于在甲状腺激素处理的青蛙中表达未加速,在变态抑制的青蛙中表达也未延迟,所以甲状腺激素不太可能是诱导表达的直接发育信号,尽管它们似乎是变态时发生的I类表达上调所必需的。不同细胞亚群中表达模式的差异表明,在个体发育过程中I类抗原表达的调控模式复杂。