Characterization of the physical interaction between antigen-specific B and T cells.

VM Sanders, JM Snyder, JW Uhr… - Journal of immunology …, 1986 - journals.aai.org
VM Sanders, JM Snyder, JW Uhr, ES Vitetta
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950), 1986journals.aai.org
It has been assumed that physical interaction between B cells and helper T cells in the
presence of specific antigen is an early and essential step in the physiologic antibody
response to thymus-dependent antigens. The present studies were designed to examine
this physical interaction by employing carrier-specific T hybridoma cells that can provide
help to highly enriched hapten-binding B cells. Direct conjugation of the B and T cells can be
visualized at both the light and electron microscopic level and the number of conjugates can …
Abstract
It has been assumed that physical interaction between B cells and helper T cells in the presence of specific antigen is an early and essential step in the physiologic antibody response to thymus-dependent antigens. The present studies were designed to examine this physical interaction by employing carrier-specific T hybridoma cells that can provide help to highly enriched hapten-binding B cells. Direct conjugation of the B and T cells can be visualized at both the light and electron microscopic level and the number of conjugates can be directly quantified. Before their effective conjugation with T cells, the B cells must be incubated with specific antigen for 4 to 6 hr. After this time, the T cells form conjugates with the B cells within 5 min. Conjugate formation requires hapten specificity, carrier specificity, covalent linkage between hapten and carrier, and is MHC restricted. Two types of T-B conjugates were observed by electron microscopy: an antigen-independent attachment of B cell microvilli to small portions of the T cell surface and an antigen-dependent, intimate apposition of large areas of the plasma membranes of the T and B cells. The kinetics of development of the two modes of interaction suggest that the second type may be important for signal transduction, since the number of T and B cells showing intimate interactions increases with time. Monoclonal antibodies directed against Thy-1.2, LFA-1 alpha, L3T4, and I-A partially block conjugation of the two cell types, suggesting that these surface molecules are involved in T-B interaction.
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