Mls-1a-induced peripheral tolerance to host minor histocompatibility antigens in radiation bone marrow chimeras. Modification of T cell repertoire associated with active suppression and permanent presentation of host antigens
- PMID: 1534822
Mls-1a-induced peripheral tolerance to host minor histocompatibility antigens in radiation bone marrow chimeras. Modification of T cell repertoire associated with active suppression and permanent presentation of host antigens
Abstract
Minor histocompatibility Ag (mHAg) can be responsible for the development of graft vs host reaction (GVHR) after bone marrow transplantation. In a mouse model, B10.D2 donor immunization against Mls-1a prevents lethal GVHR developed by CD4+ T cells against DBA mHAg in irradiated (DBA/2 x B10.D2)F1 hosts. Such F1 hosts become 100% chimeric and show long term survival (LS mice). The cellular mechanisms underlying the tolerance in LS mice was investigated. It was found that a state of tolerance can be induced in thymectomized F1 hosts. Although spleen cells from LS mice are able to initiate lethal GVHR in third-party H-2k-incompatible hosts, no GVHR is observed in secondary hosts incompatible for specific DBA/2 mHAg. Mixed lymphocyte experiments in vitro confirm that T cells from LS mice are unresponsive toward specific DBA/2 mHAg, although they are able to proliferate in response to H-2 or Mls-1a Ag. The responsiveness to Mls-1a correlates with the presence of V beta 6+ cells in LS mice, probably derived from mature T cells present in the donor inoculum. The tolerance in LS mice is not due to the lack of DBA/2 mHAg presentation; instead, permanent presentation of Ag (Ag I and Ag II) previously described as being responsible for lethal GVHR is consistently observed. A significant protection against GVHR is obtained by transferring normal B10.D2 cells together with spleen cells from LS mice, clearly indicating the contribution of active suppression in the state of tolerance; this is further confirmed by in vitro results obtained in limiting dilution assays. It is concluded that tolerance in chimeric LS mice 1) is due to a peripheral (thymus-independent) mechanism; 2) is specific for mHAg; 3) correlates with unresponsiveness of the repertoire to host mHAg, without alteration of the repertoire for H-2 and Mls-1a Ag; and 4) is associated with an active suppression and with a permanent presentation of at least two mHAg responsible for GVHR mortality.
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