Abstract

The impairment of cellular immunity in mice infected with Mycobacterium lepraemurium was shown to correlate with the development of suppressor cells. We have previously reported that before suppressor activity is detectable in freshly harvested cell suspensions, suppressor cell precursors accumulate in the spleen of infected mice. Upon overnight culture in the presence of a regulatory cell subset, these precursor cells acquire the capacity to impair the concanavalin A (Con A)-induced proliferation of normal spleen cells. The purpose of this study was to determine the phenotype of the cells involved in this phenomenon. This was done by following the development of suppressor activity in spleen cell suspensions depleted of defined cell subsets of the adherent or the non-adherent cell fractions with selected MoAbs and immunomagnetic beads or by in vivo treatment. Our results indicate that the acquisition of suppressor activity requires the interaction of Ia+CD11b+Fc gamma R+IgG- asialo GM1- adherent cells with Thy1-CD4-CD8-IgG-Ia- asialo GM1-Fc gamma R+CD11b+ non-adherent cells. It is also shown that the development of suppressor activity is impaired by preventing cell-cell contact between these two cell subsets through coculture in 'Transwell chambers'. These observations support the conclusion that the in vitro acquisition of suppressor activity is a consequence of the maturation of suppressor cell precursors of the monocytic lineage induced by a receptor-ligand type interaction with a non-adherent cell subset that is clearly distinct from mature T, B and natural killer (NK) cells.

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