Abstract

Injection of low doses of particulate hepatitis B surface Ag (HBsAg) into H-2d mice without adjuvants primes an Ld-restricted, S28-39-specific T cell response. This study indicates that dendritic cells (DC) and macrophages (M phi) both serve as APCs that support priming of CD8+ CTL precursors in vivo to exogenous HBsAg particles. After transfer into a syngeneic, naive host, HBsAg particle-pulsed DC, either freshly purified from skin or derived from a cloned DC line, efficiently primed class I-restricted, HBsAg-specific CTL precursors. M phi, either harvested from the peritoneal cavity or generated in macrophage-CSF-stimulated bone marrow cell cultures in vitro or derived from established, cloned M phi lines (PU5-1.8, J774A.1), pulsed with HBsAg particles in vivo or in vitro, elicited a class I-restricted, HBsAg-specific CTL response after adoptive transfer into naive hosts. The class I-restricted CTL response induced by HBsAg particle immunization was suppressed in carrageenan-treated mice, but was restored when carrageenan-treated mice were immunized with syngeneic, HBsAg-pulsed M phi. Selective elimination of M phi by liposome-incorporated dichloromethylene-diphosphonat did not suppress the induction of a CTL response of H-2d mice by HBsAg particle immunization. HBsAg-pulsed, freshly prepared DC are more potent than pulsed M phi in priming class I-restricted CTL in vivo. The relative importance of both types of APC in priming CTL remains to be resolved.

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