A small population of CD4+ OVA-specific TCR transgenic T cells was tracked following the induction of peripheral tolerance by soluble Ag to address whether functionally unresponsive, or anergic T cells, persist in vivo for extended periods of time. Although injection of OVA peptide in the absence of adjuvant caused a transient expansion and deletion of the Ag-specific T cells, a population that showed signs of prior activation persisted in the lymphoid tissues for several months. These surviving OVA-specific T cells had long-lasting, but reversible defects in their ability to proliferate in lymph nodes and secrete IL-2 and TNF-α in vivo following an antigenic challenge. These defects were not associated with the production of Th2-type cytokines or the capacity to suppress the clonal expansion of a bystander population of T cells present in the same lymph nodes. Therefore, our results provide direct evidence that a long-lived population of functionally impaired Ag-specific CD4+ T cells is generated in vivo after exposure to soluble Ag.
CITATION STYLE
Pape, K. A., Merica, R., Mondino, A., Khoruts, A., & Jenkins, M. K. (1998). Direct Evidence That Functionally Impaired CD4+ T Cells Persist In Vivo Following Induction of Peripheral Tolerance. The Journal of Immunology, 160(10), 4719–4729. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.160.10.4719
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