Abstract

Intrathymic injection of guinea pig myelin basic protein (MBP) or the immunodominant, encephalitogenic fragment of MPB, 68-86, without otherwise compromising the peripheral lymphocyte pool in adult LEW rats, dramatically inhibits onset of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) caused by the usual peripheral inoculation with MBP in complete Freund's adjuvant. This surprising finding demonstrates that interaction of antigen and one or more components of an intact thymus can down-regulate systemic responses by mature T cells already existing in the peripheral lymphocyte pool. How this happens is not known. In studies designed to explore possible mechanisms: (a) adult thymectomized animals remain susceptible to active EAE, thus EAE cannot be attributed solely to recent thymic emigrants that might be inactivated by antigen deposited in the thymus; (b) heterotopic isografts of injected thymic lobes transfer thymic tolerance to secondary recipients, thus the tolerance effect is dominant over an intact, non-treated thymus; (c) T cells from made thymic tolerant but not immunized donors are less effective in causing EAE following adoptive transfer into, and active immunization of, secondary, irradiated recipients; and (d) animals resistant to active EAE as a consequence of thymic tolerance are fully vulnerable to adoptive EAE caused by already activated MBP-specific T cell subpopulations. These results rule out a possible mechanism previously proposed for acquired thymic tolerance, i. e., that potentially pathogenic T cells traffic to the antigen-injected thymus where they are inactivated or eliminated.

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