Comparison of peptide and superantigen-induced anergy in a peptide-specific polyclonal human T cell line.
Int Immunol
; 7(7): 1057-63, 1995 Jul.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-8527403
T cells recognizing tetanus toxin peptide 'p2' (sequence 830-844) raised in HLA DR6 individuals preferentially express V beta 2 in the TCR. A p2-specific T cell line (60% V beta 2+) was used to compare peptide and superantigen [toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1)]-induced clonal anergy. Many experiments consistently revealed that the degree of 'tolerance' or 'clonal anergy' induced by peptide was greater than with the superantigen TSST-1. These results are of interest in a number of contexts. First they suggest that using superantigens or anti-V beta to delete the majority population of T cells may not be sufficient to diminish an autoimmune response. Secondly, the results indicate that induction of anergy of a large proportion of peptide-specific T cells does not lead to a suppressive bystander effect on the remaining responsive T cells. These results emphasize the need to define the dominant autoantigenic epitopes in human autoimmune diseases, since peptide based therapy such as the use of peptide analogues to induce anergy or a change in cytokine profile, is possibly more effective in controlling undesired immune responses than the use of non-antigen, TCR-directed approaches such as superantigens.
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Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Fragmentos de Péptidos
/
Toxinas Bacterianas
/
Linfocitos T
/
Superantígenos
/
Anergia Clonal
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Año:
1995
Tipo del documento:
Article