Abstract
We have studied the reactivity of chicken T cells to mycobacterial antigens. Neither peripheral blood nor splenic lymphocytes isolated from unprimed chickens proliferated in response to mycobacterial antigens (mycobacterial sonicate, purified protein derivative, or recombinant 65-kDa heat-shock protein HSP65). After immunization with complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) a strong response appeared, and a transient increase of peripheral blood γδ T cells was observed. Analysis of spleen cells isolated from CFA-primed chickens showed that both αβ and γδ T cells were activated by the mycobacterial antigens, apparently at equal levels. Both subsets also responded to HSP65, but no preference of γδ T cells to respond to it or any of the other mycobacterial antigens was observed. These results indicate that although HSP65 is an important mycobacterial antigen, it is not dominant in the chicken γδ T cell repertoire. Moreover, the results show a clear distinction between the naive and primed repertoire of γδ T cells.
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