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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 149, Issue 5 1571-1576, Copyright © 1992 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

Minor lymphocyte stimulatory antigen-bearing stimulator cells require lipopolysaccharide activation to induce programmed cell death in T cell hybridomas

J Payne and BT Huber
Department of Pathology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02111.

T cell hybridomas respond to conventional peptide Ag associated with self major histocompatibility restriction elements, as well as to alloantigens, activating lectins, and stimulatory forms of mAb by producing lymphokines and undergoing programmed cell death (PCD). We show here that the level of PCD and IL-2 production correlate well in responses to CD3 or allostimulation. The response to minor lymphocyte- stimulatory (Mls) Ag, members of the family of endogenous superantigens, however, are marked by divergence in the levels of the PCD and lymphokine responses. Specifically, PCD in response to Mls activation is achieved poorly despite vigorous IL-2 production. B lymphoma cell stimulators induced PCD in alloreactive T cell hybridomas but not in Mls-reactive T cell hybridomas. This suggests that the absence of PCD in the Mls response is a function of superantigen recognition rather than the stimulator cell type. LPS-preactivated Mls+ stimulators, either splenic B or B lymphoma cells, are shown to trigger PCD in the T cell hybridomas. These results imply that T cell interaction with Mls presented by untreated stimulator cells is not sufficient for induction of PCD and thus is distinct from interactions with conventional Ag.





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