Abstract

The stimulator cells for the activation of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) precursor cells were studied in vivo and in microculture systems with limiting concentrations of helper factor (interleukin-2). We found in both cases that mixtures of irradiated spleen cells from athymic and euthymic donors of different haplotypes activated CTL responses preferentially against alloantigens which were carried by the euthymic donors. This applied also if athymic and euthymic donors shared parts of the H-2 gene complex. Stimulator cells from athymic and euthymic donors activated, on the other hand, equally strong responses in microcultures which were supplemented with additional helper factor or in conventional macrocultures. This and direct cell mixing experiments showed that the ineffective stimulation by the nude spleen cells in vivo and under conditions of limiting helper factor was not mediated by active suppression. Our experiments are therefore best explained by the assumption that cytotoxic responses under conditions of limiting helper factor require a close proximity between CTL precursor cells and helper T cells. This proximity may be most efficiently provided by the receptors of the CTL precursor cells when helper T cells serve as stimulator cells. Lymph node cells were consistently inferior to spleen cells as stimulator cells, and the nylon wool nonadherent fraction of spleen cells was on the average also inferior to unfractionated spleen cells, indicating that the stimulator T cells belong to a spleen seeking and partly nylon wool adherent T-cell subpopulation or require an additional cell type for optimal stimulation.

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