Determinant specific suppression of antigen-induced T cell proliferation in the guinea pig. II. Determinant specific suppression of in vitro T cell responsiveness parallels a selective suppression of anti-hapten but not anti-carrier antibody responses
- PMID: 6153095
Determinant specific suppression of antigen-induced T cell proliferation in the guinea pig. II. Determinant specific suppression of in vitro T cell responsiveness parallels a selective suppression of anti-hapten but not anti-carrier antibody responses
Abstract
Using an antigen of defined physical structure with precisely mapped immunogenic sites, we asked whether those molecular sites previously shown to be critical for immune response gene-mediated initiation of T cell proliferation and T help correspond to the same molecular regions capable of inducing antigen-specific suppression of T cell proliferation and antibody production. Inbred strain 2, 13, and 2 x 13 F1 hybrid guinea pigs were immunized with various species variants or fragments of insulin adjuvant before subsequent immunization with antigen in complete Freund's adjuvant. Analysis of the patterns of depressed T cell responsiveness showed a striking correspondence to the Ir gene-dependent mechanism that controls the recognition of discrete regions within the insulin molecule observed in T cell help in antibody production. In addition, suppression of carrier-specific T cells parallels suppression of anti-hapten antibody responses when hapten is presented on the suppressed carrier without a concomitant suppression of the anti-carrier antibody response.