ROLE OF THE MAJOR HISTOCOMPATIBILITY COMPLEX IN T-CELL ACTIVATION OF B-CELL SUB-POPULATIONS - ANTIGEN-SPECIFIC AND H-2-RESTRICTED MONOCLONAL TH-CELLS ACTIVATE LYB-5+ B-CELLS THROUGH AN ANTIGEN-NONSPECIFIC AND H-2-UNRESTRICTED EFFECTOR PATHWAY JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY Hodes, R. J., Shigeta, M., Hathcock, K. S., Fathman, C. G., Singer, A. 1982; 129 (1): 267-271

Abstract

Monoclonal T helper (TH) cell populations were employed to study the mechanism of activation of the Lyb-5+ B cell subpopulation in T cell-dependent antibody responses in vitro. It was demonstrated that monoclonal T cell populations were sufficient to help rigorously T-depleted unprimed (B + accessory) cells for direct plaque-forming cell responses to trinitrophenyl- (TNP) conjugated keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). The activation of several lines of cloned (H-2b X H-2k)F1 TH cells was antigen (KLH) specific and H-2 restricted. Individual clones were restricted to H -2b, H-2k, or unique (H-2b X H-2k)F1 encoded determinants. Under the experimental conditions employed, responses mediated by cloned TH cells were found to result in the activation of the Lyb-5+ B cell subpopulation. The activation of Lyb-5+ B cells by cloned TH cells did not require covalent linkage of carrier and hapten, and responses could be stimulated in the presence of free KLH plus TNP conjugated to an irrelevant carrier. The H-2 restriction of TH cell function was shown to reflect a requirement for T cell recognition of determinants expressed by accessory cells, whereas no requirement existed for restricted T cell recognition of B cells. These findings suggest that the help provided by monoclonal TH cells, once activated, was both antigen nonspecific and H-2 unrestricted. Consistent with this interpretation, it was found that the supernatant of antigen-stimulated TH cells provided antigen-nonspecific help to T-depleted spleen cells. Thus, these results demonstrate that the activation of Lyb-5+ B cells by antigen-specific and H-2-restricted monoclonal TH cell populations is itself antigen nonspecific and H-2 unrestricted.

View details for Web of Science ID A1982NU21100050

View details for PubMedID 6177752