Mouse lymphocyte populations of one parental H-2 type (A) were specificially depleted of alloreactive potential by filtration through irradiated A X B F1 recipients, and thoracic duct cells were then stimulated with virus in an A X B F1 environment. Experiments using T cells that had previously been exposed to influenza virus in the context of A established that cross-priming for recognition of viral components expressed on H-2-different (B) target cells does not occur. Furthermore, immunologically naive T cells stimulated with vaccinia virus, subsequent to negative selection for reactivity to B, could not be shown to interact with virus-infected cells of type B. Either there is no significant T-cell repertoire for recognition of virus associated with an H-2 determinant not encountered during ontogeny, or such T cells are also alloreactive and are removed during filtration.
T-cell populations specifically depleted of alloreactive potential cannot be induced to lyse H-2-different virus-infected target cells
Published 1978 in Journal of Experimental Medicine
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- Publication year
1978
- Venue
Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Publication date
1978-07-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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