Cutting Edge: Culture with High Doses of Viral Peptide Induces Previously Unprimed CD8+ T Cells to Produce Cytokine
Author(s) -
Janice M. Riberdy,
Amy Zirkel,
Sherri L. Surman,
Julia L. Hurwitz,
Peter C. Doherty
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.167.5.2437
Subject(s) - cytotoxic t cell , cytokine , cd8 , virology , peptide , biology , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , immunology , immune system , biochemistry , in vitro
Culturing naive T cells with 50 microM selected HIV-1 envelope peptides for 6 days in the presence of IL-2 drives the emergence of a substantial CD8(+) population that secretes IFN-gamma following short-term stimulation with 1 microM peptide. This response is H-2K(b) restricted, epitope specific, and requires the continuing presence of peptide. The same effect was found for known H-2D(b)-restricted peptides from two influenza virus proteins. The great majority of these influenza-specific CD8(+)IFN-gamma(+) T cells neither stained with the cognate tetramer nor expressed the TCR Vbeta bias that is characteristic of the CD8(+) set expanded in vivo during an infection. Thus, multipoint binding of low affinity TCRs on naive CD8(+) T cells can drive peptide-specific cytokine production. However, at least for two influenza-derived epitopes, the avidity of the TCR-MHC peptide interaction appears to be insufficient to stabilize a tetrameric complex of MHC class I glycoprotein plus peptide on the lymphocyte surface.
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