Abstract
Background. The tissue specificity of a cytolytic T lymphocyte is determined by the MHC class I bound peptide it recognizes. We have developed an allorestricted human CTL clone, DBS 1.5, that recognizes an epitope found on HLA-A3+ kidney epithelial cells but not on HLA identical B-lymphoblastoid cells. The peptide recognized by this clone has been isolated from HPLC separated, acid eluted peptides from purified HLA class I molecules from HLA-A3+ kidney tissue. This peptide shares no sequence homology with any known protein. Methods. To confirm the tissue specificity of the HLA-A3 restricted clone and the peptide it recognizes we have transfected the gene for HLA-A3 into a number of tumor cell lines both human and murine not expressing this antigen. The resulting transfected lines, confirmed by immunofluorescent staining, were used as targets to determine if expression of HLA-A3 alone was sufficient to allow recognition and lysis by the HLA-A3 restricted T cell clone. Results. The HLA-A3 restricted T cell clone recognized HLA-A3 when expressed on human kidney epithelial cells and to a lesser extent on human lung epithelium and human epidermal cells. Of the tumor lines transfected with HLA-A3 only the human kidney tumor cell line was lysed at a level equal to the original kidney epithelial cell used to develop the clone. Conclusion. These results confirm that this allorestricted human CTL clone is tissue specific recognizing a peptide found in human epithelial tissue that must be presented in the context of HLA-A3 for recognition.
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