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Immunological Reviews | 1987

Antigen Presentation Pathways to Class I and Class II MHC‐Restricted T Lymphocytes

T J Braciale; Lynda A. Morrison; Marianne T. Sweetser; Joe Sambrook; Mary-Jane Gething; V L Braciale

Our observations on the cellular immune response to type-A influenza suggest the existence of two distinct pathways of protein antigen presentation to T lymphocytes. One of these pathways is involved with presentation of antigens introduced into the presenting cell from without. This exogenous presentation pathway is the well-recognized route of presentation of soluble and particulate antigens to T lymphocytes. This pathway probably involves uptake of antigen into endocytic vesicles, alteration of antigen within an intracellular compartment, and subsequent display of antigen on the presenting cell surface (Unanue 1984). The second pathway is one which we have tentatively designated as an endogenous presentation pathway. The constraints on this pathway have yet to be fully defined. At a minimum, this pathway appears to involve the presentation of antigens which are synthesized de novo in the presenting cell utilizing the cells biosynthetic machinery. This pathway may also handle preformed antigens located within the cytosolic compartment of the presenting cell. Perhaps the most striking feature of these two antigen presentation pathways is the close association between the MHC restriction of an antigen-specific T lymphocyte and the pathway of antigen presentation to that T lymphocyte. Our data suggest that this association holds both at the effector level and at the level of induction of T lymphocytes. Thus, presentation of a given antigen by the endogenous pathway preferentially triggers a response from class I MHC-restricted T lymphocytes directed to that antigen. The molecular basis for this link of class I MHC-restriction to the endogenous pathway and MHC class II restriction to the exogenous pathway is unknown. It seems likely that interactions between MHC molecules and antigen within the presenting cell may be critical for the demarcation of these pathways. Thus, for example, antigen presented by the endogenous route may only be able to associate intracellularly with newly synthesized or recycling class I MHC molecules. An understanding of the molecular basis of this phenomenon will require detailed information on the expression, intracellular trafficking, and transport of class I and class II MHC molecules in the antigen-presenting cell. An unresolved issue, at least in the case of viral antigens, is the nature and form of the antigenic moieties presented by the exogenous and endogenous pathways. In the case of viral antigen presentation to class II MHC-restricted T lymphocytes, there is strong, albeit indirect, evidence for processing of antigen and recognition of fragments of viral polypeptides (Lamb et al. 1982, Hackett et al. 1983).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Cellular Immunology | 1984

Influenza virus-specific human cytotoxic T cell clones: Heterogeneity in antigenic specificity and restriction by class II MHC products

David R. Kaplan; Rogers C. Griffith; V L Braciale; T J Braciale

Human cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for A/JAP/57 (H2N2) influenza virus were cloned from in vitro stimulations of peripheral blood lymphocytes. Analysis of the viral specificity in cytotoxic function revealed one clone that killed all type A influenza-infected targets, another clone that was specific for the hemagglutinin subtype of the immunizing influenza virus, and the third clone that demonstrated cytotoxicity restricted to the hemagglutinin of A/JAP/57 and A/JAP/62 (H2N2) and not other type A influenza strains with the H2N2 subtypes. The phenotype of these three clones was Leu 2-, Leu 3+, Leu 4+; MHC restriction of their cytotoxic function was mapped to HLA-DR by a panel of target cells as well as by inhibition of cytotoxicity with monoclonal antibodies. Proliferation of these clones, examined in a tritiated thymidine incorporation assay, was found to be driven by antigen in the absence of exogenous lymphokines. For all three clones antigen-dependent production and secretion of lymphokines with IL-2 activity was demonstrated. The antigen specificity of proliferation and factor production was shown to be identical to the pattern that each clone revealed in its cytotoxic function.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1994

Influenza virus-specific CD4+ T helper type 2 T lymphocytes do not promote recovery from experimental virus infection.

Mary Beth Graham; V L Braciale; T J Braciale


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1993

Response to influenza infection in mice with a targeted disruption in the interferon gamma gene.

Mary Beth Graham; D K Dalton; D Giltinan; V L Braciale; T A Stewart; T J Braciale


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1985

Expression of specific cytolytic activity by H-2I region-restricted, influenza virus-specific T lymphocyte clones.

Aron E. Lukacher; Lynda A. Morrison; V L Braciale; B Malissen; T J Braciale


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1987

ON THE ROLE OF THE TRANSMEMBRANE ANCHOR SEQUENCE OF INFLUENZA HEMAGGLUTININ IN TARGET CELL RECOGNITION BY CLASS I MHC-RESTRICTED, HEMAGGLUTININ-SPECIFIC CYTOLYTIC T LYMPHOCYTES

T J Braciale; V L Braciale; M Winkler; I Stroynowski; L Hood; J Sambrook; M J Gething


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1984

Cytotoxic T lymphocyte recognition of the influenza hemagglutinin gene product expressed by DNA-mediated gene transfer.

T J Braciale; V L Braciale; T J Henkel; J Sambrook; M J Gething


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1987

Expression of a murine polyclonal T cell receptor marker correlates with the use of specific members of the V beta 8 gene segment subfamily.

Mark A. Behlke; T J Henkel; Steven J. Anderson; Nancy C. Lan; Leroy Hood; V L Braciale; T J Braciale; Dennis Y. Loh


Journal of Immunology | 1988

Antigen form influences induction and frequency of influenza-specific class I and class II MHC-restricted cytolytic T lymphocytes.

Lynda A. Morrison; V L Braciale; T J Braciale


Journal of Immunology | 1984

Mycoplasma infection of cell cultures: thymidine incorporation of culture supernatants as a screening test.

David R. Kaplan; T J Henkel; V L Braciale; T J Braciale

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T J Braciale

Washington University in St. Louis

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Lynda A. Morrison

Washington University in St. Louis

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T J Henkel

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mary Beth Graham

Medical College of Wisconsin

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David R. Kaplan

Washington University in St. Louis

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J Sambrook

Washington University in St. Louis

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John Gorka

Washington University in St. Louis

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M J Gething

Washington University in St. Louis

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Aron E. Lukacher

Pennsylvania State University

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C Bono

Washington University in St. Louis

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