Affiliation:
1. Departments of Immunology and Renal Medicine, Royal Postgraduate Medical School, London, U.K.
Abstract
1. Major histocompatibility complex class II antigens have the central role in the immune response of ‘presenting’ antigenic peptide to CD4+ T-cells. This interaction with a T-cell's receptor may result in activation, but, if recognition occurs without collateral molecular interactions which cause ‘co-stimulation’, these T-cells will be tolerized.
2. In the light of current interest in muscle cell transplantation, a transformed myoblast, TE671, phenotypically comparable to untransformed cells, transfected to express class II, was studied as a stable model of antigen presentation by muscle cells. These cells failed to activate T-cells but induced tolerance.
3. The DRα chain is unusual being the only non-polymorphic classical class II polypeptide, raising the question of its functional contribution. To this end, several single polypeptide constructs were generated with contributions from different class II α-chains. On this basis, it was established that DRα makes significant contributions to peptide binding and that its α2 domain is also important in T-cell recognition, possibly through CD4 binding.
4. One implication of the lack of polymorphism of DRα may be that it has a wider range of pairing partners, possibly including β chains of different isotypes. To address this, it is planned to use transfectants expressing only a mixed isotype pair to generate T-cell clones in vitro. These reagents would be useful tools to detect whether such mixed pairs exist physiologically. In this paper, the development of a system is described which will allow this question to be addressed.
Cited by
2 articles.
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