Adoptively transferred CD4+ lymphocytes from CD8-/-mice are sufficient to mediate the rejection of MHC class II or class I disparate skin grafts.

AH Dalloul, E Chmouzis, K Ngo… - Journal of immunology …, 1996 - journals.aai.org
AH Dalloul, E Chmouzis, K Ngo, WP Fung-Leung
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950), 1996journals.aai.org
Recent studies revealed that CD4+ cells initiate allograft rejection through direct recognition
of allogeneic MHC class II Ags and indirect recognition of MHC peptides processed by self
APCs. Both pathways were shown to help CD8+ cells that eventually lysed allogeneic MHC
class I-presenting targets. There was little evidence, however, that CD4+ cells are sufficient
for graft rejection. We studied skin graft rejection by CD8-deficient (CD8-/-) mice. We showed
that BALB/cJ (H-2d) CD8-/-mice could reject allogeneic skin from C57BL/6J (H-2b) mice …
Abstract
Recent studies revealed that CD4+ cells initiate allograft rejection through direct recognition of allogeneic MHC class II Ags and indirect recognition of MHC peptides processed by self APCs. Both pathways were shown to help CD8+ cells that eventually lysed allogeneic MHC class I-presenting targets. There was little evidence, however, that CD4+ cells are sufficient for graft rejection. We studied skin graft rejection by CD8-deficient (CD8 -/-) mice. We showed that BALB/cJ(H-2d) CD8 -/- mice could reject allogeneic skin from C57BL/6J(H-2b) mice deficient in MHC class I or in MHC class II Ags. To understand the role of CD4+ cells in this process, we isolated them from CD8 -/- mice and transferred them to BALB/cJ nude mice that had been grafted with allogeneic skin (H-2b) from animals deficient in MHC class I or MHC class II. Nude mice injected with CD4+ cells rejected MHC class II and, albeit more slowly, MHC class I disparate skins. We showed in vitro evidence that CD4+ cells were not cytotoxic toward MHC class I or MHC class II disparate targets and that they recognized MHC class I allogeneic targets through indirect recognition. CD4+ cells produced Th1 cytokines, but not IL-4, following stimulation with allogeneic cells. Furthermore, intragraft TNF-alpha was elevated in skin grafted onto nude mice reconstituted with CD4+ cells compared with nonreconstituted mice. This suggests that MHC class II- or MHC class I-guided CD4+ cells alone are sufficient to induce rejection by the generation of cytokine-induced lesions.
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