Abstract

B lymphocytes secreting IgG linked to latent transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta (IgG-TGF-beta) prevent cytolytic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses to unrelated antigens in mixed lymphocyte cultures (MLC) so long as resting resident macrophages and functional Fc receptors are present. This was shown using IgG-secreting plaque-forming cells (PFC) to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC) obtained from popliteal lymph nodes of mice injected repeatedly in foot pads with SRBC. Remarkably, as few as approximately 300 PFC prevented CTL responses of 5 x 10(5) normal syngeneic spleen cells in MLC. Supranatants of short-term cultures of PFC also prevented CTL responses, and suppression was prevented by eliminating or dissociating IgG and TGF-beta present in supranatants or by antibody against active TGF-beta. Furthermore, the latency-associated peptide of latent TGF-beta was detected in approximately 10% of foci of IgG captured from single PFC, indicating that at least some B lymphocytes secrete IgG-TGF-beta as a complex. Resting resident macrophages (which do not produce latent TGF-beta) and functional Fc receptors were required for suppression, consistent with idea that IgG-TGF-beta is taken up through Fc receptors for IgG and that active TGF-beta, cleaved from latent TGF-beta of the complex, is delivered directly to potentially responding CTL. If CTL responses in man are similarly regulated by B lymphocytes, then an ongoing B cell response in patients with chronic viral infections or bearing immunogenic cancers may prevent effective therapeutic vaccination.

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