Abstract

To gain insight into the mechanisms of immunity to bovine herpesvirus type-1 (BHV-1) in particular the importance of the T-cell response, we attempted to clone bovine cytotoxic T lymphocytes that were specific for BHV-1 infected autologous target cells. A number of bovine T cell clones were generated by limiting dilution in the presence of bovine recombinant IL-2 and BHV-1 infected target cells as feeder layers. These clones were maintained in culture on crude IL-2 containing supernatants. In functional studies, 4 of the 16 T cell clones were shown to have high levels of cytotoxic activity specific for autolgous BHV-1 infected target cells with significantly lower cytotoxic activity against uninfected target cells and heterologous BHV-1 infected target cells. Continuous culturing of these 4 T cell clones, using either the crude IL-2 or high concentrations of recombinant bovine IL-2, resulted in the loss of both MHC restricted and BHV-1 specific cytotoxic activity. These clones now exhibit promiscuous type cytotoxic activity with the ability to lyse a variety of target cells. Using flow cytometric analysis, the phenotype of the T cell clones were shown to have bovine T lymphocyte characteristics including expression of the BoT8 marker. This is the first report of cloned bovine cytotoxic T lymphocytes reactive against BHV-1 and the generation from these clones of promiscuous cytotoxic activity against both virus-infected and non-infected bovine target cells.

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