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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

CD8+ T cells specific to the exogenous antigen. Mode of antigen recognition and possible implication in immunosuppression.

This study demonstrates and characterizes CD8+ T cells specific to the exogenous Ag, bovine alpha s1-casein. Purified CD8+ T cells from alpha s1-casein-primed lymph node cells proliferated well in response to an alpha s1-casein derivative, trypsin-digested alpha s1-casein. CD8+ T cell repertoire for the exogenous Ag was directly demonstrated in the primary culture condition. The intact alpha s1-casein primed the responding CD8+ T cells in vivo more efficiently than the tryptic alpha s1-casein; however, the in vitro proliferative response by the intact alpha s1-casein was weaker than that of the tryptic alpha s1-casein. CD8+ T cells recognized the exogenous Ag in association with MHC class I molecules as revealed by an Ab-blocking study. The major immunodominant region for the CD8+ T cells was mapped to region 136-151 of alpha s1-casein, and peptide 136-151 primed the responding CD8+ T cells but not any CD4+ T cells. Peptide 136-151 is the CD8+ T cell-specific determinant. Upon antigenic stimulation, the exogenous Ag-specific CD8+ T cells produced a significant level of IFN-gamma, which has immune suppressive activity for IgE synthesis. Our study strongly implies that CD8+ T cells that proliferate and produce IFN-gamma in response to the exogenous Ag would play a vital role in Ag-specific immunosuppression.[1]

References

  1. CD8+ T cells specific to the exogenous antigen. Mode of antigen recognition and possible implication in immunosuppression. Hisatsune, T., Nishijima, K., Kohyama, M., Kato, H., Kaminogawa, S. J. Immunol. (1995) [Pubmed]
 
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