Affiliation:
1. Dermatology Branch, National Cancer Institute, and the Laboratory of Immunology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health From the , Bethesda, Maryland 20014
Abstract
Abstract
Langerhans cells (LC) constitute a morphologically well-characterized minor subpopulation of the mammalian epidermis whose functional role is still a matter of conjecture. The hypothesis that LC represent an epidermal equivalent to cells of the monocyte-macrophage-histiocyte series is supported by the recent observations that in humans and guinea pigs LC are the only epidermal cells that express Fc-IgG receptors, C3 receptors, and Ia antigens. Using inbred strain 2 and strain 13 guinea pigs, we investigated in this study whether LC can mediate the same immunologic functions as Ia-bearing macrophages. LC-enriched and LC-depleted epidermal cells were prepared by separation of Fc-IgG rosetting epidermal cells on density gradients. When both populations were tested for the biosynthesis of alloantigens by immunoprecipitation techniques, Ia antigen synthesis was restricted to the LC-enriched fraction. Functional studies demonstrated that antigen-pulsed LC-enriched epidermal cells induce a proliferative response in immune T cells that is comparable in magnitude to that seen with macrophages. Moreover, effective presentation of immunologically relevant antigen requires syngeneity between LC-enriched epidermal cells and responder lymphocytes. In the mixed leukocyte reaction (MLR), LC-enriched epidermal cells were as effective stimulators as macrophages. LC-depleted epidermal cells, by contrast, induced little or no stimulation in both assay systems. Both the antigen-presenting and the MLR-stimulatory capacities of LC-enriched epidermal cells could be abrogated by pretreatment with anti-Ia sera and complement. The presence in the epidermis of Ia-bearing LC, capable of mediating the immunologic functions of Ia-bearing macrophages, has important clinical implications with regard to the role of LC as sensitizing cells in both contact hypersensitivity and skin graft rejection.
Publisher
The American Association of Immunologists
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
4 articles.
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