Abstract

An in vitro antigen presentation system was used to study how antigens coupled to the surface of phospholipid vesicles (liposomes) are presented to antigen specific T cells. Liposome-bound pigeon cytochrome c (PCC) was 30–40-fold more potent than free PCC when peritoneal macrophages were the presenting cell. B cells presented surface-bound PCC, albeit less efficiently than unmodified PCC. Surface-bound peptide epitope was presented by both cell types, but not as efficiently as unmodified peptide. With the T cell epitope, antigen processing was not required since glutaraldehyde fixed cells could present surface-bound peptide.

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