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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 152, Issue 5 2198-2206, Copyright © 1994 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

IL-2 reverses human T cell unresponsiveness induced by thymic epithelium in SCID-hu mice

D Schols, B Vandekerckhove, D Jones and MG Roncarolo
DNAX Research Institute, Human Immunology Department, Palo Alto, CA 94304-1104.

In this study we investigated the mechanism responsible for the unresponsiveness of thymus-reactive T cells obtained from severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice constructed with human fetal liver (FL) stem cells from donor A and an allogeneic human fetal thymus (FT) from donor B (A/B SCID-hu mice). These A/B SCID-hu mice have a human thymus containing B cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells from FL donor A but thymic epithelial cells from FT donor B. The repertoire of human T cells developing in this chimeric thymus is depleted of T cells specific for the HLA Ags of the FL donor, whereas T cells reactive against the HLA Ags expressed by the FT donor are still present. However, these thymocytes failed to proliferate and expressed low levels of the activation markers CD25, CD71, and HLA-DR after stimulation with the EBV-LCL of the FT donor in primary MLRs. This unresponsiveness could be completely reversed by IL-2. Restoration of T cell responsiveness was Ag specific and a unique property of IL-2. The T cells produced very low levels of IL-2 when stimulated with the HLA Ags of FT donor B, whereas they secreted normal levels of IL-2 after activation by third party alloantigens. Low IL-2 production was also observed at the clonal level. CD4+ T cell clones from A/B SCID-hu mice, specific for the HLA Ags of B, produced significantly less IL-2 and granulocyte macrophage-CSF than control CD4+ T cell clones. However, these T cell clones synthesized normal levels of IL-2 and granulocyte macrophage-CSF after stimulation with combinations of PMA/Calo or PMA/anti-CD3 mAb. Thus, T cells that differentiate in a chimeric thymus containing allogeneic host thymic epithelium are rendered tolerant to the HLA Ags expressed by the thymic epithelial cells. This tolerance results in the presence of T cells that do not proliferate properly after Ag-specific stimulation. This lack of proliferation is primarily related to their inability to produce sufficient levels of IL-2 and can be restored by exogenous IL-2.


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B. Nikolic, J. P. Gardner, D. T. Scadden, J. S. Arn, D. H. Sachs, and M. Sykes
Normal Development in Porcine Thymus Grafts and Specific Tolerance of Human T Cells to Porcine Donor MHC
J. Immunol., March 15, 1999; 162(6): 3402 - 3407.
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