Helper T Cell lines to major and to minor histocompatibility antigens are equally effective in the regulation of B cell responses in vivo

1984 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 406-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.K. Lai ◽  
T. Owens
Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 413-413
Author(s):  
Tetsuya Nishida ◽  
Ana Kostic ◽  
David G. Maloney ◽  
Rainer F. Storb ◽  
Stanley R. Riddell

Abstract Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) following non-myeloablative (NM) conditioning is a promising approach for treating patients with advanced fludarabine refractory CLL. In this setting, a graft versus leukemia (GVL) effect mediated by donor T cells is critical for tumor eradication. We have evaluated the development of alloreactive and CLL-reactive cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses in patients after NM-HSCT to determine if the generation of detectable T cell responses was associated with an antitumor response. Seven patients with fludarabine refractory CLL were conditioned with fludarabine (30mg/m2 x 3 doses) and total body irradiation (2 Gy) prior to receiving G-CSF mobilized peripheral blood stem cells from an HLA matched donor. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were obtained from the recipient pretransplant and at intervals after NM-HSCT. When chimerism showed a major proportion of donor CD3+ T cells, the postransplant PBMC were stimulated in vitro with recipient CLL cells from the pretransplant collections. CLL cells lack or express low levels of co-stimulatory and adhesion molecules, and are poor stimulators of T cells in vitro. Thus, prior to their use as stimulators and targets, the CLL cells were activated with CD40 ligand (CD40L), which upregulates costimulatory, adhesion, and MHC molecule expression, and turns CLL cells into effective antigen presenting cells. The cultures were stimulated weekly and supplemented with IL2 and IL7. After two stimulations, the T cell lines were tested for cytotoxicity against donor and recipient target cells including recipient CLL. T cell lines generated from four patients with a good antitumor response after NM-HSCT exhibited cytotoxicity against recipient CLL and EBV transformed B cells (B-LCL), but not against donor B-LCL. By contrast, T cell lines generated from three patients with persistent or progressive disease after NM-HSCT did not have cytotoxicity against recipient CLL, despite the development of GVHD in all patients. Multiparameter flow cytometry and IFN-g secretion assay of T cell lines from patients with an antitumor response showed that both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells produced INF-g in response to recipient CLL. We sorted and expanded CD8+ INF-g+ and CD4+ IFN-g+ T cells and both subsets were able to lyse CLL cells. The cytotoxicity of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was inhibited completely by concanamycin A, suggesting perforin is the major mechanism for leukemia cell lysis. Twenty-one CD8+ T cell clones specific for distinct minor histocompatibility antigens expressed on CLL were isolated from T cell lines of the four responding patients. Multiple specificities were recognized in three of the four patients. Screening a cDNA expression library has identified the genes encoding two minor histocompatibility antigens recognized by CD8+ T cells, and their characterization is in progress. These findings suggest that the development after NM-HSCT of early, diverse, alloreactive T cell responses specific for antigens expressed by CLL may be an important predictor of outcome. The identification of the antigens recognized may facilitate the development of strategies to evoke an effective antitumor response in a larger fraction of patients.


1983 ◽  
Vol 157 (1) ◽  
pp. 312-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Bandeira ◽  
G Pobor ◽  
S Petterson ◽  
A Coutinho

Major histocompatibility complex-restricted helper T cell clones against "minor" antigens expressed on B cell and macrophage surfaces, when confronted with appropriate T cell-depleted spleen cells, are induced to proliferation and, in turn, activate "target-responder" B cells to polyclonal growth and maturation. Irradiation of helper cell populations, however, demonstrates that their effector functions (and B lymphocyte responses) are independent of proliferative activity. Adherent cell depletion on Sephadex G10 columns, while completely abrogating helper T cell proliferation, does not abolish helper cell-induced B cell responses, demonstrating a remarkable quantitative difference in macrophage requirements for the growth of these two cell types. Because significant B cell responses are detected upon interaction with primed helper T cells under conditions of extreme macrophage depletion, we conclude that the role of macrophages in T-B cell cooperation is limited to expansion of optimal numbers of helper T lymphocytes. It follows that activated helper cells can autonomously produce all B cell-specific growth and maturation factors mediating cooperative antibody responses. In contrast, the profound reduction of LPS-induced responses upon macrophage depletion suggests accessory cell production of such factors in thymus-independent B cell growth and/or maturation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 161 (1) ◽  
pp. 223-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
H P Tony ◽  
D C Parker

Anti-Ig has been widely used as a model for antigen receptor-mediated B cell activation. B cells activated with mitogenic concentrations of anti-Ig (approximately 10 micrograms/ml) become responsive to a set of T cell-derived, antigen-nonspecific helper factors that enable the B cells to proliferate, and, in some cases, mature to Ig secretion. In the present experiments, we show that anti-Ig can also be used as a model for major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted, antigen-specific T-B cell collaboration. We used murine helper T cell lines and T cell hybridomas specific for a protein antigen, the F(ab')2 fragment of normal rabbit IgG. Small B cells are very efficient at presenting rabbit anti-IgM or rabbit anti-IgD to these rabbit Ig-specific T cell lines and hybridomas, and the responding (initially) small B cells, appear to be the only antigen-presenting cells required. Efficient presentation depends upon binding of rabbit antibody to mIg on the B cell surface. MHC-restricted recognition of rabbit Ig determinants on the B cell surface results in a polyclonal B cell response. This response is qualitatively different from the well-studied response to blastogenic concentrations of anti-Ig plus stable, T cell-derived helper factors, since it (a) requires 1,000-fold lower concentrations of anti-Ig, (b) involves helper T cell functions other than, or in addition to, the local production of the same stable helper factors, and (c) is largely MHC-restricted at the T-B cell level.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 3237-3237
Author(s):  
Brad Stone ◽  
Scott Graves ◽  
Arnold Kas ◽  
Alexander Ford ◽  
Nathan Standifer ◽  
...  

Abstract Traditional methods for identifying minor histocompatibility antigens (mHags) are technically challenging and biased against discovery of mHags not expressed in the peripheral blood. In this work, we propose a rapid, unbiased, genetic approach for identification minor antigens resulting from disparities in coding non-synonymous SNPs (“C SNPS”). This approach is capable of testing for responses to candidate minor antigens expressed in virtually any tissue, including those expressed exclusively in tissues targeted by GVHD. The first step in our approach begins with comparison of donor and recipient C SNP genotypes generated using C SNP microarrays. These arrays interrogate approximately 80% of human C SNPs predicted to occur in greater than 5% of the population. Comparison of C SNP genotypes directly identifies protein-altering alleles present in the recipient but not the donor (hereafter referred to as “recipient-restricted” alleles), thereby identifying a transplant-specific set of candidate minor antigens. The second step utilizes conventional HLA-class I epitope prediction performed on all linear peptides that include amino-acid residues defined by a recipient-restricted allele. This two step filtering process identifies a small, “testable” number candidate minor peptide epitopes for an individual expressed HLA-class I allele. Candidate epitopes can then be synthesized, pooled and tested at diagnosis of GVHD using a commercial Granzyme B ELISPOT assay. As proof-of-principal for a direct genotyping approach, we have analyzed C SNP genotypes, performed epitope prediction and generated T-cell lines specific for candidate minor antigens using DNA and PBL from a pair of disease-free HLA-identical siblings. Analysis of 10,000 C SNPs shows that approximately 2,000 C SNP alleles are restricted to one sibling within the pair. BIMAS epitope prediction of short unique peptide sequences determined by each sibling-restricted allele identifies approximately 100 candidate minor epitopes predicted to bind HLA-A*0201. These candidate minor epitopes were ranked using expression microarrays performed on EBV-transformed LCL derived from each sibling, with candidates derived from highly expressed genes ranked above those from genes with lower expression levels. A pool of 12 candidate minor epitopes that were both unique to sibling “A” and derived from genes highly expressed in LCL were synthesized and used to generate CD8+ T-cell lines from sibling “B”. Stimulation utilized autologous (sibling “B”-derived) mature dendritic cells loaded with candidate minor epitopes. After several rounds of in-vitro stimulation, each T-cell line was tested for responses to EBV-LCL from sibling “B” and sibling “A” using a Granzyme B ELISPOT kit. Five out of sixteen lines responded to LCL from sibling A while no line responded to autologous LCL. Thus we show that this approach frequently generates CD8+ T-cell lines specific for sibling-derived target cells, suggesting that this approach efficiently identifies genuine, novel, endogenously processed and presented minor epitopes. Deconvolution of the peptide pool suggests that at least two out of the twelve candidate minor epitopes are naturally processed and presented.


1984 ◽  
Vol 160 (1) ◽  
pp. 329-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
D E Mosier ◽  
A J Feeney

The requirements for T cell/B cell interaction for the induction of primary in vitro antibody responses to phosphorylcholine (PC)-keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) were examined. Long-term helper T cell lines derived from KLH-primed (CBA/N X BALB/c) F1 female mice (H-2k/d) were able to support a T15-idiotype dominant, IgM anti-PC response of BALB/c (H-2d) B cells and macrophages, but could not activate PC-specific responses by BALB.B (H-2b) B cells, even in the presence of irradiated H-2k/d antigen-presenting cells. Polyclonal IgM secretion in the same cultures did not appear to depend upon a major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted T-B interaction. Since IgM anti-PC responses seem to be entirely derived from the Lyb5+ B cell subpopulation, we conclude that at least some Lyb5+ B cells can only be activated by MHC-restricted T-B interactions. We also found that xid B cells from (CBA/N X BALB/c) F1 male mice could be polyclonally activated by helper T cell lines by an apparently MHC-unrestricted interaction. Our data thus suggests that residence in the Lyb5- or Lyb5+ B cell subset does not determine the T:B interaction requirements for antibody synthesis.


1979 ◽  
pp. 193-207
Author(s):  
James N. Woody ◽  
Ann Rees ◽  
Nathan J. Zvaifler ◽  
Sarah Howie ◽  
Aftab Ahmed ◽  
...  

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