Anergic T cells actively suppress T cell responses via the antigen‐presenting cell

LS Taams, AJML van Rensen… - European journal of …, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
LS Taams, AJML van Rensen, MCM Poelen, CACM van Els, AC Besseling, JPA Wagenaar…
European journal of immunology, 1998Wiley Online Library
We here show that anergic T cells are active mediators of T cell suppression. In co‐culture
experiments, we found that anergic T cells, derived from established rat T cell clones and
rendered anergic via T cell presentation of the specific antigen (Ag), were active inhibitors of
T cell responses. Anergic T cells inhibited not only the responses of T cells with the same Ag
specificity as the anergic T cells, but were also capable of efficiently inhibiting polyclonal T
cell responses directed to other epitopes. This suppression required close cell‐cell contact …
Abstract
We here show that anergic T cells are active mediators of T cell suppression. In co‐culture experiments, we found that anergic T cells, derived from established rat T cell clones and rendered anergic via T cell presentation of the specific antigen (Ag), were active inhibitors of T cell responses. Anergic T cells inhibited not only the responses of T cells with the same Ag specificity as the anergic T cells, but were also capable of efficiently inhibiting polyclonal T cell responses directed to other epitopes. This suppression required close cell‐cell contact between antigen‐presenting cells (APC), anergic T cells and responder T cells, and only occurred when the epitope recognized by the anergic T cell was present. The suppression was not caused by passive competition for ligands on the APC surface, IL‐2 consumption, or cytolysis, and was not mediated by soluble factors derived from anergic T cells that were stimulated with their specific Ag. When responder T cells were added 24 h after co‐culturing anergic cells in the presence of Ag and APC, T cell responses were still suppressed, indicating that the suppressive effect was persistently present. However, anergic T cells were not able to suppress responder T cells that had already received a full activation signal. We propose that suppression by anergic T cells is mediated via the APC, either through modulation of the T cell‐activating capacity of the APC (APC/T cell interaction), or by inhibition of T cells recognizing their ligand in close proximity on the same APC (T/T cell interaction).
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