Abstract

It is well established that a large fraction of murine cytotoxic T cells can recognize allogeneic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens, and that the majority of this response are not restricted by H-2 antigens of the responding host. In contrast, the murine response against the xenogeneic HLA class I antigens is relatively weak. Moreover, a large proportion of the responding murine T cells do not recognize the HLA antigen per se but only in an H-2-restricted manner, probably as an HLA peptide bound to H-2. Considerable evidence suggests that in mice the T cell repertoire is selected by thymic H-2 antigens. Therefore, we asked the question whether in transgenic mice expressing an HLA class I antigen the T cell repertoire would be shaped toward a more effective recognition of other HLA alleles. Normal C57BL/6 (B6) and HLA-Cw3-transgenic B6 mice were immunized with a B6-derived cell line transfected with HLA-A2. The resulting A2-specific CTL were tested on L cells transfected with either A2 alone, which should identify the H-2-unrestricted CTL, and on L cells transfected with A2 plus H-2b genes, which should identify the sum of H-2b-restricted and unrestricted CTL. Both bulk culture and limiting dilution experiments showed that the CTL precursor frequencies for A2-specific CTL were not increased in the transgenic mice, and that both strains produced comparable proportions of H-2b-restricted and of unrestricted A2-specific CTL. The B6.Cw3 mice seemed to respond less well to HLA-A2 than the normal B6 mice, suggesting the possibility of tolerance for peptides shared by the Cw3 and A2 molecules. In conclusion, the T cells in the B6.Cw3 transgenic mice did not seem to be selected towards a stronger and more unrestricted recognition of an allo-HLA antigen. The possible reasons are discussed.

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