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. 1991 Nov;74(3):399-406.

Primary proliferative and cytotoxic T-cell responses to HIV induced in vitro by human dendritic cells

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Primary proliferative and cytotoxic T-cell responses to HIV induced in vitro by human dendritic cells

S E Macatonia et al. Immunology. 1991 Nov.

Abstract

In earlier studies, primary proliferative and cytotoxic T-cell (CTL) responses to influenza virus were produced in vitro by using mouse dendritic cells (DC) pulsed with virus or viral peptide as the stimulus for syngeneic T cells in 20-microliters hanging-drop cultures. We have now adapted this system for producing primary responses with cells from non-immune donors to produce primary proliferative and CTL responses to human immunodeficiency virus I (HIV) and to HIV peptides in vitro using cells from normal human peripheral blood. All donors in this study were laboratory personnel with no history of HIV infection. DC enriched from peripheral blood were exposed to HIV in vitro and small numbers were added to T lymphocytes in 20-microliters hanging drops. Proliferative responses to virus-infected DC were obtained after 3 days in culture. After 6 days, CTL were obtained that killed virus-infected autologous--but not allogeneic--phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated blast cells. Proliferative and CTL responses were obtained using cells from 14 random donors expressing a spectrum of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) types but the CTL, once produced, showed killing restricted by the MHC class I type. Treatment of cultures with monoclonal antibody (mAb) to CD4-positive cells at the beginning of culture blocked the development of both proliferative and CTL responses, but treatment after 5 days had no effect on the CTL activity. Treatment with MCA to CD8-positive cells at the beginning of culture did not block proliferation significantly, but treatment either before or after the 5-day culture period blocked CTL responses. Collaboration between proliferating CD4-positive cells and CD8-positive cells may thus be required to produce CTL of the CD8 phenotype. DC exposed to HIV also produced CTL that killed autologous blast cells pulsed with gp120 envelope glycoprotein. However, DC infected with whole virus did not produce CTL that lysed target cells pulsed with a synthetic peptide, which included a known T-cell epitope of gp120 (representing amino acids 111-126). DC pulsed with gp120 were a poor stimulus for the development of CTL. In contrast, DC pulsed with the peptide (111-126) stimulated both proliferative and CTL responses. The latter killed not only target cells pulsed with the peptide itself or with gp120 but also killed virus-infected autologous blast cells. CTL were again obtained reproducibly with this peptide using donors expressing a spectrum of MHC types.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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