Abstract

The i.v. inoculation of parental spleen cells into unirradiated adult F1 hybrid mice results in a graft-versus-host reaction (GVHR). In the strain combination B10D2 --> (B10.BRx B10.D2) F1, this reaction is associated with thymic injury and transient but profound cellular immune deficiency. We further analysed the immune status of these mice 60 days after GVHR induction. Phenotypic studies of spleen cells showed that these mice were repopulated with parental lymphocytes resulting in a high degree of chimerism (85%). At this time, the mice looked healthy and recovered a normal cytotoxic T cell response (CTL) against allogeneic cells. GVH chimeric splenocytes were unresponsive against F1 hybrid cells in mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC), but exhibited anti-F1 CTL reactivity. We also analysed the anti-F1 reactivity of these mice in vivo. GVH chimeric splenocytes were unable to induce GVHR after injection into a new F1 hybrid and F1 GVH mice specifically rejected F1 bone marrow (BM) cells after lethal irradiation. Grafting a neonatal parental thymus prevented the rejection of F1 BM cells and restored CTL alloreactivity. It is concluded that the chimeric state induced by GVHR is associated with a split tolerance and that a radiosensitive thymic-dependent mechanism is involved in maintaining self-tolerance in these mice.

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