Abstract
Lines of thymus-derived lymphocytes reactive against bovine myelin basic protein (BP) were established in vitro from SJL/J mice. These lines are stable in long-term culture and mediate inflammatory central nervous system (CNS) lesions and a low incidence of clinical experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) when injected into recipient SJL/J mice. The line cells proliferate in response to BP of bovine, rat, or mouse origin. Clones were derived from these lines, and the characteristics of these clones were analyzed. The clones express Thy-1, Ly-1, and L3T4 antigens and are negative for Ly-T2. The clones all proliferate in response to bovine BP, with different clones showing varying degrees of cross-reactivity between bovine, rat, and mouse BP. The proliferative response is MHC-restricted; antigen-presenting cells from I-As strains are required. Compatible with their phenotype as helper cells, some of the clones will provide help to primed B cells stimulating antibody production in an in vitro assay. When injected into recipients pretreated with pertussis and irradiation, clones that showed proliferation to mouse BP induced the development of inflammatory lesions in the CNS, with mortality of 28% of the recipients. T cell lines were also established in (BALB/c x SJL/J)F1 mice. In contrast to the homozygous SJL/J lines, these lines were highly encephalitogenic, inducing a high incidence of clinical and histologic EAE when injected in vivo.
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