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. 1975 Jan;114(1 Pt 1):30-3.

Capacity of sensitized thymus-derived lymphocytes to induce fatal lymphocytic choriomeningitis is restricted by the H-2 gene complex

  • PMID: 1078677

Capacity of sensitized thymus-derived lymphocytes to induce fatal lymphocytic choriomeningitis is restricted by the H-2 gene complex

P C Doherty et al. J Immunol. 1975 Jan.

Abstract

Adoptive immunization of syngeneic, immunosuppressed recipients infected with lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM) virus causes fatal neurologic disease within 2 to 4 days of cell transfer, providing that donors are sampled when the in vitro 51-Cr release assay shows maximal specific activity of sensitized thymus-derived lymphocytes (T cells). Prior treatment of immune spleen cells with AKR anti-omicron ascitic fluid and complement causes total abrogation of this in vivo activity. Fatal neurologic disease is induced only when donor and recipient share at least one set of H-2 antigenic specificities. Parent yields F1 and F1 yields parent combinations are as effective as syngeneic systems, but mice given allogeneic immune cells survive as long as controlsmdifferences at the M-locus in H-2 compatible mice do not inhibit effector activity. Homing of transferred lymphocytes to spleen is similar in syngeneic or allogeneic recipients, but only syngeneic immune cells cross the blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barrier and cause choriomeningitis. Fatal LCM, is, therefore, apparently induced by a specifically sensitized omicron-bearing cell population, activity of which is restricted by the H-2 gene complex.

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