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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 154, Issue 8 3761-3770, Copyright © 1995 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

The human anti-murine xenogeneic cytotoxic response. II. Activated murine antigen-presenting cells directly stimulate human T helper cells

PJ Lucas, CV Bare and RE Gress
Experimental Immunology Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20892.

Generation of a human T cell anti-murine xenogeneic response has previously been shown to be dependent on presentation of murine Ag by human APC. We have undertaken a series of experiments to better delineate the cellular defects that prevent effective production of IL- 2 by human T cells upon direct exposure to murine stimulator populations. It was found that although resting human T cells cannot respond effectively to resting murine APC, they can respond to activated murine stimulator populations. Such APC activation could be mediated by murine granulocyte-macrophage-CSF or LPS that were associated with increased expression of B7-2 on the xenogeneic stimulating cell populations. Blocking studies with Ab provided further evidence that costimulation through CD28 played a critical role in the stimulation of human T cells by activated murine-stimulator cells in the production of IL-2. These results demonstrate the usefulness of this xenogeneic system in understanding human T cell-APC interactions and defining minimally sufficient T cell activation requirements. They further delineate the cellular level of deficient activation in the xenogeneic stimulation of human T cells by murine cell populations, and identify the potential importance of CD28/CTLA4 and its ligands in xenogeneic responses. These observations and concepts have implications for clinical efforts in xenografting.


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