Abstract
The hen egg-white lysozyme (HEL)-specific suppression induced by soluble molecules produced by a monoclonal T-cell lymphoma line (LH8-105) obtained from HEL-specific suppressor T lymphocytes has been examined. Injection of I-J+ molecules from LH8-105 cell culture supernatant (TsFa) in HEL-primed mice during the afferent phase of the response induced Lyt-2+ second order suppressor T (Ts) cells which, upon transfer into HEL-CFA-primed syngeneic recipients, inhibit the delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) response to HEL. Transfer of spleen cells from TsFa-injected mice primed with HEL or human lysozyme suppresses the DTH response to HEL in recipient mice whereas this response is not affected by cell transfer from ring-necked pheasant egg-white lysozyme (REL)-primed and TsFa-injected mice, indicating that induction of second order Ts by TsFa is specific for a lysozyme epitope including phenylalanine at position 3. Fine antigenic specificity of second order Ts-cell induction is confirmed by similar results obtained upon injection of TsFa in mice primed with HEL N-terminal synthetic peptide or with an analog in which, as in REL, phenylalanine has been substituted by tyrosine at position 3. The same fine antigenic specificity observed in the induction of second order Ts cells is also present in the expression of TsFe suppressive activity. The similar antigenic specificity of Tsa and Tse suggests that Tse cells could result from amplification of the Tsa cell population or these two cell subsets could reflect different maturation stages of the same cell type rather than distinct T-cell populations activated in cascade.
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