Suppression of cell-mediated immune responses after total lymphoid irradiation (TLI). I. Characterization of suppressor cells of the mixed lymphocyte reaction.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Total lymphoid irradiation (TLI) was administered to (BALB/c X C57BL/6)F1 mice in eight daily doses of 200 rad (total 1600 rad). Spleen cells isolated from mice after treatment with TLI do not respond to alloantigens in vitro in a one-way mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR), but normal reactivity recovers after approximately 2 mo. Radioresistant, antigen-nonspecific suppressor cells are documented in the spleens of TLI-treated mice immediately after radiotherapy, but suppressive capacity gradually disappears within 30 days. After TLI, the spleen is repopulated with large cells, the proportion of which is greatest at a time when theta-bearing cells are still depleted. Radioresistant suppression is mediated predominantly by the large cell subset and is thymus independent. Suppressor function can be abolished by lethal physicochemical procedures including formaldehyde fixation, multiple freeze-thawing, and heating to 56 degrees C, and it cannot be conferred by supernatants of TLI-suppressed MLR suspensions. Suppression cannot be overcome by adding various cell factors including T cell growth factor (TCGF) and lymphocyte-activating factor (LAF), nor is it affected by a prostaglandin inhibitor. Equally potent radioresistant suppressive activity is documented by co-culturing cells derived from other sources enriched in large, immature hematopoietic cells, including fetal liver cells and bone marrow cells obtained from normal and congenitally athymic mice. The presence of a large cell population and MLR suppressor function is also documented in the spleens of mice treated with single dose or fractionated doses of lethal whole body irradiation, followed by reconstitution with bone marrow cells obtained from normal mice. The data suggest that MLR suppressor cells, which are large, immature and predominantly radioresistant, can be induced after a short and well-tolerated TLI regimen.