Abstract

Staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) is a potent mitogen for both human and murine T lymphocytes. We report here studies which demonstrate that a suppressor cell population, capable of suppressing the primary immune response of normal syngeneic mouse splenocytes to heterologous sheep erythrocytes (SRBC), is activated by SEB. Enterotoxin concentrations ranging from 0.05 to 5.0 Mg ml −1 are capable of activating this suppressor cell population, and significant suppression can be detected with relatively small numbers of SEB-primed spleen cells (SEB-PSC) in culture. Elimination of macrophages before or after priming splenocytes with SEB does not reduce the suppression of plaque-forming cell (PFC) responses when SEB-PSC are added to normal cells in Mishell-Dutton cultures. Treatment of cells with anti-Thy-1 serum plus complement, after priming with SEB, effectively eliminates the activity of the suppressor cell population. Enrichment for T cells before priming with SEB results in greater suppression of PFC responses than do SEB-PSC generated in cultures of nonfractionated splenocytes. Activation of suppressor cells with SEB in vitro appears to occur through the induction of the T-cell subpopulation expressing the Lyt-1 −,2 +,3 + cell surface phenotype, since selective depletion of this T-cell subpopulation with monoclonal rat anti-mouse Lyt-2 antisera after priming cells with SEB virtually eliminates the suppressor activity.

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