Professional presentation of antigen by activated human T cells.
Journal: 1994/August - European Journal of Immunology
ISSN: 0014-2980
Abstract:
Activated human T cells express class II molecules, but their capacity to present soluble antigens and stimulate T cells has been repeatedly questioned. Two lines of evidence indicate that T cells may indeed function as professional antigen-presenting cells. First, T cells that have been recently activated can efficiently capture, process and present tetanus toxoid to class II-restricted T cell clones. This capacity correlates with the rate of class II synthesis. Second, activated T cell clones express high levels of B7, are powerful stimulators in mixed lymphocyte reactions, and their stimulatory capacity is inhibited by soluble CTLA4 or anti-B7 antibody. Furthermore, expression of B7 can be detected in vivo on T cells from biopsies of patients with liver disease. Presentation of soluble antigen by activated T cells may play a role in the amplification of the specific response, and possibly in immunopathological states.
Relations:
Citations
(20)
Drugs
(2)
Chemicals
(3)
Organisms
(1)
Processes
(2)
Anatomy
(4)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.