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Departments of
*
Immunology and
Rheumatology, Mayo Clinic and Medical School, Rochester, MN 55905; and
Research Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84132
| Abstract |
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|
|
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ß
(DQA1*0301/DQB*0302) or HLA-DQ6
ß
(DQA1*0103/DQB1*0601) molecules lacking endogenous
murine class II expression (Aß0) to investigate the ability of these
HLA class II to present type II collagen (CII) and induce
collagen-induced arthritis. The DQ8
ß tg mice responded strongly to
CII, developing severe arthritis, while DQ6
ß tg mice were
nonresponsive to CII. The addition of the mixed haplotype DQ8
6ß
molecule did not significantly influence CII reactivity. To examine the
interaction of DQ6
ß and DQ8
ß molecules in vivo, we generated
double tg DQ6
ß/8
ß (Aß0) mice expressing both the
- and
ß-chains of DQ6 and DQ8 molecules by mating DQ6
ß (Aß0) and
DQ8
ß (Aß0) tg mice. CII-immunized DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice
developed severe experimental polychondritis, exhibiting both
polyarthritis and auricular chondritis. The clinical, serologic, and
histologic manifestations of experimental polychondritis are similar to
those symptoms in human relapsing polychondritis. The susceptibility of
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice compared with resistance in the parental
strains suggests that expression of both the DQ6
ß and DQ8
ß
tgs, unique to the DQ6
ß8
ß tg strain, is important in
susceptibility to experimental polychondritis. The DQ6
ß/8
ß tg
mice provide a model to investigate putative autoantigens and the
mechanisms of pathogenesis involved in relapsing polychondritis as well
as the influence of the expression of multiple HLA class II molecules
on the disease process. | Introduction |
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Auricular chondritis is the most common clinical manifestation of RP, present in at least 30% RP patients at the initial diagnosis and eventually displayed in 85% of all RP cases (3, 7). Auricular chondritis is characterized by recurrent incidence of acute pain, erythema, and swelling of the cartilaginous portions of the outer ear, which resolves within weeks. During the acute phase, there is extensive mononuclear infiltrate containing lymphocytes, macrophages, and eosinophils accompanied by depositions of Ig and the C3 component of complement along the fibrocartilaginous line (8). One or more inflammatory episodes result in the destruction of the cartilaginous tissues of the outer ear, which is then replaced with fibrous tissue (9), often described as a "cauliflower" ear.
Another common feature of RP is polyarthritis, developing in >50% of patients over the course of RP (6, 10). Other manifestations include nasal chondritis, which results in the classical saddle nose deformation following the destruction of the cartilaginous tissues in the nasal bridge (3), ocular inflammation (7), laryngotracheal disease (3), and renal involvement (11). Involvement of the cartilaginous tissues of the respiratory tract is the most critical manifestation in RP. Much of the increased mortality associated with RP is due to airway collapse with respiratory obstruction (3).
Both anti-type II collagen (anti-CII)-specific Abs (12, 13) and cell-mediated immunity (14) have been observed in RP patients. The anti-CII Abs have been shown to be specific for native CII and unable to recognize denatured CII (12, 15), and correlation between anti-CII Ab levels and disease activity has been found (12). Anti-CII Abs detected in RP patients have a different specificity than anti-CII Abs produced during rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The anti-CII Abs produced during RP recognize predominately the cyanogen bromide (CB) fragment 9/7 of human CII, while RA-associated Abs have a more diverse pattern of specificity, with CB 11 and CB 8 being the most commonly recognized fragments (13). Polychondritis has also been reported in CII-immunized rats, with 10% of the experimental rats developing auricular chondritis (16, 17, 18). Disease was shown to be driven by a mononuclear infiltration leading to destruction of the cartilage and was associated with systemic humoral and cellular CII-specific responses. These observations indicate an autoimmune aspect of RP and suggest a role for CII as a putative autoantigen.
We have recently generated transgenic (tg) mice expressing
HLA-DQ6
ß (DQA1*0103/DQB1*0601) or HLA-DQ8
ß
(DQA1*0302/DQB1*0301) molecules, both lacking endogenous
class II expression (Aß0), to investigate the role of human class II
molecules in the induction of arthritis using an animal model of RA,
collagen-induced arthritis (CIA). Bovine CII-immunized DQ6
ß tg
mice were resistant to arthritis (19), while the DQ8aß tg mice
developed severe arthritis and strong CII-specific B and T cell
responses (20). Addition of the DQ6ß-chain (DQB1*0601) to
the DQ8
ß tg mice tempered the strong DQ8
ß-mediated
CII-specific response, but did not block CIA (19). None of these tg
strains displayed other characteristics of RP.
Here we describe the generation of double tg mice expressing both
HLA-DQ6 and HLA-DQ8 molecules on a murine class II-deficient background
(DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice). Following bovine CII immunization, unlike
the parental strains, DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice developed auricular
chondritis and severe polyarthritis, accompanied by strong
anti-CII-specific humoral and cellular immune responses. The
observation of polychondritis in DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice but not in
the parental strains indicates that expression of all four human class
II chains is required for the additional disease phenotype. Certain
human diseases have been associated with the expression of certain
combinations of HLA class II alleles. It has been postulated that this
may be due to the formation of mixed haplotype molecules, produced by
transcomplementation of HLA class II molecules; however, a role for
such hybrid class II molecules in pathogenesis has not been shown
definitively. The DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice provide a novel model to
examine the immunologic and pathogenic aspects of RP as well as to
investigate how the expression of multiple human class II molecules may
affect susceptibility to disease.
| Materials and Methods |
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All mice were bred in our pathogen-free facility and maintained
in our clean conventional area of the Immunogenetics Mouse Colony at
the Mayo Clinic (Rochester, MN). The generation of mice expressing
HLA-DQ6
(DQA1*0103), DQ6ß (DQB1*0601),
DQ8
(DQA1*0301), and DQ8ß (DQB1*0302)
transgenes was achieved by mating HLA-DQ6
ß tg (Aß0) (19) and
HLA-DQ8
ß tg (Aß0) mice (20). The generation of the parental
strains has been described previously and is outlined in Figure 1
. The presence of the transgenes was
determined by PCR, and surface expression was determined by flow
cytometry. Experimental mice were between 6 and 12 wk of age when
immunized with CII, and there was an equal representation of both sexes
in each experimental group.
|
The expression of cell surface markers were assessed by flow
cytometry as previously described (19). Briefly, PBLs were isolated
from whole blood, washed extensively, and incubated with mAbs specific
for HLA-DQ
(IVD12) (21), HLA-DQ6ß (L227) (22),
H-2A
b (7-17.7) (23), or H-2Eßb
(Y-17) (24). The PBLs were washed again and incubated with
FITC-conjugated goat F(ab')2 specific for mouse IgG
(Accurate Chemical and Science, Westbury, NY). In those preparations in
which CD4 expression was measured, PBL preparations were incubated with
phycoerythrin-conjugated CD4 mAb. All preparations were fixed in 1%
formalin and analyzed using a FACS Vantage flow cytometer (Becton
Dickinson, Mountain View, CA).
Immunization with CII
Pure native type II bovine collagen (CII) was obtained by extensive and multiple step purification described previously in detail (16). Polychondritis was induced by intradermal immunization at the base of the tail of 100 µg of pure native bovine CII emulsified 1/1 in CFA (Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37 Ra; Difco, Detroit, MI), and mice were boosted on day 28 with 100 µg of native bovine CII emulsified in IFA. The mice were observed at least three times a week, for 16 wk following CII immunization, for the development of auricular chondritis and/or polyarthritis. The severity of clinical arthritis was assessed as previously described (25), with each paw scored as follows: 0 = normal, no inflammation; 1 = swelling of digits; 2 = severe swelling of the foot or ankle and/or joint deformity; or 3 = ankylosis of the ankle joint. Each mouse had a possible arthritic score of 0 to 12.
CII-specific T cell proliferation analysis
The ability of DQ-expressing APCs to induce a CII-specific
response from DQ6
ß/8
ß T cells was assessed by an in vitro
proliferation assay. Briefly, lymph node cells (LNCs) were purified
from mice primed with bovine CII (200 µg of bovine CII emulsified in
CFA 1/1 intradermally at the base of the tail and the hind footpads),
resuspended in complete medium (RPMI 1640, Life Technologies, Grand
Island, NY; 5% heat-inactivated horse serum, 25 mM HEPES, 2 mM
glutamine, 100 U/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin), added in
triplicate to flat-bottom microtiter plates (Corning, Corning, NY) at
1 x 106 cells/well, and challenged with 5 µg/well
of heat-denatured bovine CII. The cells were incubated at 37°C in 5%
CO2 for 48 h, pulsed with [3H]thymidine
(1.8 µCi), incubated for an additional 18 h, and harvested; then
[3H]thymidine uptake was measured as counts per minute in
a liquid scintillation counter (Beckman, Palo Alto, CA). The
proliferative responses are displayed as a stimulation index (SI) to
appropriately compare the proliferative ability of T cells from strains
of mice with different intrinsic background counts per minute: SI
= [(mean cpm of triplicate cultures with denatured bovine CII) ÷
(mean cpm of triplicate cultures with medium alone)]. SI values
2.5
were considered a significant proliferative response. The influence of
various cell populations on the proliferative response was determined
by the addition of mAb specific for HLA-DQ
(IVD12), HLA-DQ6ß
(L227), H-2A
b (7-17.7), H-2Eßb
(Y-17), CD4 (GK1.5), and CD8 (53.7.72) or an irrelevant isotype-matched
mAb specific for HLA-A, -B, and -C (MB40.5; 20 µl of culture
supernatant/well) to cultures of LNCs stimulated with bovine CII. The
efficacy of blocking is reported as the percent inhibition: 1 -
[(
cpm of cultures + experimental mAb) ÷ (
cpm of cultures +
irrelevant control mAb)] x 100.
Anti-CII Ab analysis
Levels of anti-bovine and anti-mouse CII IgG were measured by ELISA as described previously (26) in sera obtained 35 and 84 days following CII immunization. Briefly, microtiter plates were coated with bovine or mouse CII (6 µg/well in KPO4, pH 7.6), incubated overnight at 4°C, washed extensively, and blocked with 1% BSA in PBS/0.05% Tween-20. Serum was added in fourfold dilutions (1/100 to 1/65,000) in duplicate and incubated overnight at 4°C. Serial dilution of a high titer anti-CII IgG-positive serum were run in parallel with all ELISAs for standardization. The plates were washed again, peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Organon Teknika, West Chester, PA) was added, and overnight incubation was performed at 4°C. The plates were washed, O-phenylenediamine was added, and the colorimetric change was measured at 410 nm. Anti-CII IgG levels were calculated from the OD of the high titer standard sera, arbitrarily determined to equal 100 Ab units (AU)/ml.
The specificity of the anti-bovine CII Abs was determined by a similar ELISA. Microtiter plates were coated with one of the following CB fragments of bovine CII: CB8, CB10, CB11, or CB12, and the level of CB-specific anti-CII IgG is expressed as a percentage of the total CII Ab response: [1 - (OD of the CB-specific IgG) ÷ (OD of total anti-bovine CII IgG)] x 100.
Histologic assessment
Outer ears exhibiting clinical chondritis were surgically removed from anesthetized mice at various time points following the onset of disease, embedded in paraffin, sectioned (6 µm), and mounted. Sections were stained with hematoxylin and eosin or toluene blue. Hind limbs were removed and dissected from euthanized mice at the culmination of the experiment. The joints were decalcified in EDTA for 4 days and embedded in paraffin. Sections of 6 µm were cut, mounted, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. All stained sections were assessed for histopathologic changes.
In addition, chondritic ears obtained as described above, fixed in OTC,
(Sakura Fine Technical Co., Torrence, CA) sectioned, and mounted
for immunostaining. Sections were incubated with biotinylated
anti-mouse CD3-
(145-2C11) (27, 28), CD4 (H129.19) (29, 30), CD8
(53-6.7) (31), B220/CD45R (RA3-6B2) (32), or
CD11b/Mac1-
M (M1/70) (33, 34) mAb. Cells expressing
these surface markers were visualized with
avidin-horseradish-peroxidase. Stained sections were evaluated in a
blinded manner and scored as follows for the percentage of mononuclear
cells present: -, no positive cells detected; ±, <5% positive; +, 5
to 10% positive; ++, 11 to 20% positive; +++, 21 to 50% positive;
and ++++, >50% positive.
Statistical analysis
The significance of differences in incidence of peak arthritic severity and onset of clinical arthritis were compared using the nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. Only arthritic mice were considered for comparison of severity and onset of disease. Ab levels were compared by Students t test.
| Results |
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ß/8
ß mice
To assess the influence of coexpression of HLA-DQ6 and DQ8
molecules on CII-induced autoimmune responses, HLA-DQ6 (Aß0) tg mice
(19) were mated with HLA-DQ8 (Aß0) tg mice (20) as delineated in
Figure 1
. Offspring of this combination, DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice,
contained transgenes coding DQ6
, DQ6ß, DQ8
, and DQ8ß, as
determined by PCR (data not shown), and expressed HLA-DQ molecules on
the surface of PBLs (Table I
). All the
mice used in these studies lack the expression of endogenous class II
molecules, similar to the class II knockout mice (35).
|
ß/8
ß tg mice expressed 7.9% CD4+ T cells
in the periphery, compared with 8.9% in DQ8
ß tg mice and 5.7% in
DQ6
ß tg mice, based on mean expression on PBLs of three mice per
strain assessed individually by flow cytometry. The CD4+ T
cell population was polyclonal in nature as demonstrated by the
expression of a variety of Vß TCR families on DQ6
ß/8
ß tg
PBLs (data not shown). Development of polychondritis
Polyarthritis.
Cohorts of DQ6
ß/8
ß tg, DQ8
ß tg, DQ6
ß tg, and CIA
prototypic B10.T(6R) (H-2q) mice were immunized with bovine CII in CFA
and boosted 28 days later with bovine CII in IFA. The DQ6
ß/8
ß
tg mice developed polyarthritis with an incidence comparable to that in
CIA-susceptible parental DQ8
ß tg mice (71 and 79%, respectively;
Table II
). The mean days of onset were
also similar (day 36 in DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice and day 39 in
DQ8
ß mice). The peripheral joints of all four limbs of
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice were capable of exhibiting severe clinical
arthritis, with a representative arthritic rear limb illustrated in
Figure 2
B. There was no
preferential development of polyarthritis based on sex. Histologic
analysis demonstrated that the inflammation was accompanied by a
mononuclear infiltrate, pannus formation, and the destruction of the
cartilage (Fig. 2
D) as seen in polyarthritis associated with
RP, RA, and CIA. The DQ6
ß tg mice were resistant to CIA, with only
one of the mice developing clinical arthritis.
|
|
ß/8
ß tg mice developed auricular chondritis
(Table II
ß tg or DQ8
ß tg mice,
had clinical or histologic involvement of the outer ear following CII
immunization (data not shown). Acute bilateral chondritis was detected
in DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice with a mean day of onset of 51 days after
initial bovine CII immunization, with incidence occurring equally
between male and female mice. The outer ears exhibited swelling and
erythema (Fig. 3
ß/8
ß ears (data not shown). At 1 wk after the onset of
clinical auricular chondritis, there was a significant infiltration of
mononuclear cells along the fibrocartilaginous line, which consisted of
approximately 10% CD4+ and 5% CD8+ T cells
and >50% macrophages (Table III
|
|
|
ß/8
ß tg
mice
The ability of DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice to recognize and present
bovine CII was assessed in vitro using LNCs from CII-primed
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice. As shown in Figure 5
, the DQ6
ß/8
ß T cells mount a
significant response to denatured bovine CII challenge. As we have
previously shown, DQ8
ß T cells also respond strongly to bovine CII
(20), at levels comparable to those in DQ6
ß/8
ß T cells, while
DQ6
ß T cells do not respond (19), indicating that the DQ6
ß
molecule is unable to recognize and/or present bovine CII. Coincubation
with anti-CD4 and anti-DQ mAb demonstrated that the bovine CII
response is CD4 and DQ restricted in DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice (Fig. 6
). Blocking of CD8, HLA-DQ6ß, H-2A
,
or H-2Eß molecules did not significantly affect the proliferative
response.
|
|
ß/8
ß tg mice
Following bovine CII immunization, DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice
developed high levels of anti-bovine CII IgG, significantly higher
than anti-bovine CII levels in DQ8
ß tg and B10.T(6R) mice (212
AU/ml compared with 123 AU/ml and 71 AU/ml for DQ6
ß/8
ß tg,
DQ8
ß tg, and B10.T(6R) mice, respectively; Fig. 7
). Bovine CII immunization also induced
a strong anti-mouse CII IgG response in DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice,
similar to that in DQ8
ß tg and B10.T(6R) mice. The
DQ6
ß/8
ß negative littermates produced neither an
anti-bovine nor an anti-mouse CII Ab response.
|
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| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
ß (DQA1*0103/DQB1*0601) and
DQ8
ß (DQA1*0301/DQB1*0302) genes in the absence
of endogenous murine class II expression. The expression of these four
human class II chains renders these mice susceptible to auricular
chondritis following heterologous CII immunization, which is lacking in
both parental strains, DQ6
ß tg and DQ8
ß tg mice, and in
DQ6ß8
ß tg mice as we have described previously (19). Like
DQ8
ß tg and DQ6ß8
ß tg mice, DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice
develop a strong cellular and humoral CII-specific response. The
CII-specific IgG is predominately directed at the CB10 fragment in the
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice, as in DQ8
ß tg and DQ6ß8
ß tg mice
(19, 20), suggesting that this region of CII contains at least one or
more arthritogenic epitopes and possibly the chondritic epitopes as
well. These strains also develop polyarthritis approximately 5 wk after
bovine CII immunization. Conversely, bovine CII-immunized DQ6
ß tg
mice do not produce a detectable CII-specific T cell response,
have a much weaker anti-CII Ab response (19), and do not
develop either polyarthritis or auricular chondritis.
DQ6
ß tg and DQ8
ß tg mice are have similar, but not identical,
backgrounds, containing contributions from background genes derived
from C57BL/6, 129, and B10.M strains. The principle difference among
these strains is the expression of specific HLA-DQ alleles in the
absence of endogenous murine class II molecules. The control mice are
full siblings lacking the DQ6
ß, DQ8
ß, or both transgenes.
Thus, the expression of both DQ6
ß and DQ8
ß molecules is
probably responsible for the development of polychondritis.
Heterozygosity at class II has been closely associated with
predisposition to lupus in (NZB x NZW)F1 mice. There
is evidence of the expression of both
H-2A
d/Aßz and
H-2E
d/ßz mixed haloptype molecules in the
(NZB x NZW)F1 strain (36, 37). Although
transcomplementation of HLA class II molecules, i.e., DQ molecules
forming in trans from DQ
and DQß of different haplotypes has been
suggested in human celiac disease (38) and insulin-dependent diabetes
(39, 40, 41), characterization of this phenomenon is very difficult in
humans. The potential formation of mixed haplotype DQ molecules in the
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice would be the most likely explanation for
susceptibility to auricular chondritis. In addition, expression of the
mixed haplotype DQ8
6ß molecule does not result in this disease
phenotype; therefore, the likely candidate would be the DQ6
8ß
molecule. We are currently generating these animals in our laboratory
for further studies.
Although CII is a putative autoantigen in both RP and RA, the Ag
specificity appears to be different. Similarly, DQ8
ß tg mice
develop an RA-like polyarthritis, while DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice
develop both polyarthritis and auricular chondritis, resembling a RP
phenotype. It is likely that mixed haplotype DQ6
8ß molecules are
able to present other CII epitopes causing the stimulation of another
subset of autoreactive T cells homing to the ear. Alternatively, a new
epitope presented by these molecules may stimulate autoreactive T cells
cross-reactive with another collagen present in the outer ear, such as
type IX or type XI collagen. Preliminary studies indicate that
CII-immunized DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice do express anti-type IX
collagen Abs that are lacking in the DQ8
ß tg mice following CII
immunization (data not shown). Type IX and XI collagen-specific humoral
and cellular immune responses have also been detected in RP patients
(15, 42). There are regions of homology between type II and XI collagen
molecules, making such cross-reactivity between these two molecules
conceivable.
Both the polyarthritis and the auricular chondritis that develop in
DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice mirror similar manifestations in RP. The
polyarthritis involves a massive infiltration of mononuclear cells, the
destruction of cartilage, and pannus formation. The auricular
chondritis is bilateral, with erythema and swelling of the outer ear
corresponding to a massive infiltration of mononuclear cells. The
cartilaginous tissues are destroyed, resulting in a shrunken ear that
resembles the characteristic cauliflower ear of RP. While the
polychondritis is not cyclical in the DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice, the
histopathologic phenomenon appears to be similar to the relapsing
events occurring in RP that ultimately result in the same disease
outcome. Therefore, the DQ6
ß/8
ß tg mice provide an excellent
tool to investigate the immunologic events that may be involved in RP.
In addition, the potential for the formation of mixed haplotype DQ
molecules in these mice provides a model to investigate their influence
on pathogenesis. A number of connective tissue diseases have been
difficult to characterize due to the overlapping manifestations.
Investigation of the potential of mixed haplotype molecules may also be
insightful as to the role of HLA class II expression during these
diseases.
Some linkage studies in RP have implicated HLA-DR4 genes in the
disease, but the results are not conclusive. HLA-DQ8 is one of the
DQB1*03 genes in linkage disequilibrium with the
DRB1*04 genes. If RP is mediated by a unique DQ8/6
"hybrid" molecule, linkage studies will implicate the DQ8/DR4
haplotype in some individuals and not in others. We are currently
generating DQ/DR double tg mice to further elucidate genetic
predisposition to RP. Several other autoimmune diseases in which HLA
class II linkage analysis has been controversial could involve unique
mixed haplotype class II molecules. Utilization of tg mice expressing
the various combinations of HLA DQ and DR
and ß genes could
unravel the genetic predisposition of those diseases.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
and
ß cosmids, to Dr. H. Inoko (Tokyo, Japan) for the DQ6
and ß cosmids, and to Drs. C. Benoist and D. Mathis
(Strasbourg, France) for the class II-deficient (Aß0) mice. Finally,
we thank Drs. Paul Zhou and Shen Cheng for generating the DQ8 and DQ6
tg mice, and Dr. Jeanine Baisch for breeding the Aß0 mutant gene into
these mice. | Footnotes |
|---|
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Chella S. David, Department of Immunology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905. E-mail address: ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: RP, relapsing polychondritis; CII, type II collagen; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; CB, cyanogen bromide; tg, transgenic; CIA, collagen-induced arthritis; LNC, lymph node cell; SI, stimulation index; AU, antibody units. ![]()
Received for publication March 4, 1998. Accepted for publication June 23, 1998.
| References |
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and Aß polypeptides. J. Immunol. 136:2953.[Abstract]
transgene. J. Immunol. 153:2758.[Abstract]
define distinct epitopes, one of which may interact with CD4 during T cell activation. J. Immunol. 142:4169.[Abstract]
+ß- TCR-
ß B220+ lymphokine-activated killer subset. J. Immunol. 150:17.[Abstract]
d class II molecule in (NZB x NZW)F1 mice detected by T cell clones. J. Immunol. 150:4777.[Abstract]
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