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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 132, Issue 5 2330-2337, Copyright © 1984 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

Dual parameter flow cytometric analysis of DNA content, activation antigen expression, and T cell subset proliferation in the human mixed lymphocyte reaction

JM Williams, R Loertscher, T Cotner, M Reddish, HM Shapiro, CB Carpenter, JL Strominger and TB Strom

This study provides direct correlation via dual parameter flow cytometry (simultaneous assessment of immunofluorescence and DNA content) between mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) responder cell entry into the S/G2/M phases of the cell cycle with the kinetics of expression of two activation-associated cell surface proteins, Tac (IL 2 receptor) and 4F2 (unknown metabolic function). A small population of activated cells was identifiable by expression of both Tac and 4F2 antigens before peak DNA synthesis in the MLR. This population of activation antigen-positive cells expanded linearly in size from days 3 to 7 of culture. Treatment of immature MLR cultures with anti-4F2 Mab and complement (C) before DNA synthesis (treatment on day 3, peak DNA synthesis on days 5 to 6) resulted in blunted proliferation and activation antigen expression when the same culture was analyzed after maturation on day 6, indicating that the activated population had been previously detected and removed by anti-4F2 Mab + C. The 4F2 antigen was expressed on a greater percentage of cells in the MLR at all times (days 3 to 9) than was Tac, was present on virtually all S/G2/M phase responder cells, and a large fraction of cells remained intensely 4F2+ subsequent to peak DNA synthesis. In contrast, after initially preceding responder cell entry into the S phase of the cell cycle, the kinetics of Tac antigen expression closely paralleled the kinetics of responder cell proliferation. A subpopulation of cycling responder cells was noted in all MLR cultures studied that expressed Tac antigen weakly or not at all. Cells within both T4 and T8 cell subsets proliferate with similar kinetics in response to alloantigen. The possibility that activation antigens can be utilized to study effector cell generation in the MLR and that this flow cytometric technique may be utilized to analyze the response to various alloantigens is discussed.





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