Abstract

Injection of antigen into the thymus of adult animals induces specific systemic tolerance, but the mechanisms of acquired thymic tolerance are not well understood. To investigate these mechanisms we used a model of intrathymic injection of ovalbumin (OVA) in BALB/c mice. We show an antigen-specific decrease in proliferative responses to OVA, as well as a significant decrease in antigen-specific IL-2 secretion and IFN-γ production by splenocytes and lymph node cells of tolerant mice. Addition of recombinant IL-2in vitroreversed the defect in IFN-γ production by cells from OVA-tolerized animals, but did not reverse the proliferation or IL-2 production defects. By using an adoptive transfer system, where a small population of OVA peptide-specific CD4+TCR transgenic T cells are transferred into syngeneic normal recipients, we show an absence of peripheral antigen-dependent clonal expansion of transferred CD4+TCR transgenic cells in tolerant micein vivo.There was an increase in clonotype-positive T cells in the thymus after immunization, confirming that activated T cells circulate through the thymus. Furthermore, thymectomy after intrathymic injection abrogates the effect of acquired thymic tolerance and restores antigen-dependent clonal expansionin vivo.We conclude that intrathymic injection of antigen induces Th1 cell unresponsiveness and prevents the peripheral expansion of antigen-specific CD4+T cellsin vivo.This is the first demonstration that in acquired thymic tolerance antigen-specific T cells circulate to the thymus where they may be anergized or ultimately deleted.

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