The specific direct interaction of helper T cells and antigen-presenting B cells

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Abstract

Cell couples have been formed by mixing an antigen- and Ia-specific cloned helper T-cell line with a B-cell hybridoma presenting the antigen. By immunofluorescence observations, we have shown that microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) inside the helper T cell, but not in the bound antigen-presenting cell, becomes oriented to face the area of specific cell-cell contact. This MTOC orientation is antigen- and Ia-specific, and thus provides direct evidence for the specific interaction of a helper T cell and a B cell. It is presumed that the function served by this MTOC orientation, which is accompanied by the coordinate reorientation of the Golgi apparatus, is to target Golgi apparatus-derived secretory vesicles, containing putative lymphokines and/or growth factors, from the helper T cell directly to the antigen-presenting cell.

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Kupfer, A., Swain, S. L., Janeway, C. A., & Singer, S. J. (1986). The specific direct interaction of helper T cells and antigen-presenting B cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 83(16), 6080–6083. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.83.16.6080

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