The CD2 receptor functions as an adhesion and signal molecule in T cell recognition. Multimeric binding of CD2 on T cells to its physiologic ligand LFA-3 on cognate partner cells in vitro efficiently augments the antigen-specific T cell signal delivered by the T cell receptor/CD3 complex. The precise contribution of the antigen-nonspecific CD2-LFA-3 interactions to T cell immune responses in vivo, however, has been difficult to assess. Here we analyzed the role of CD2 in the murine immune response using a nondepleting anti-CD2 monoclonal antibody that induces a marked, reversible modulation of CD2 expression on murine T and B cells in situ. This modulation is dose and time dependent, specific for CD2, and does not require the Fc portion of the antibody. Anti-CD2 antibodies [rat IgG1 or F(ab')2] significantly inhibit the CD4+ T cell-mediated response to hen egg lysozyme and the cytotoxic CD8+ T cell response to a syngeneic tumor cell line. In both cases, anti-CD2 antibodies are only effective when administered before or within 24 h after antigen priming. The suppression of the antitumor response corresponds to a sixfold reduction of specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursor cells and results in the abrogation of protective antitumor immunity. Anti-CD2 antibodies also affect the humoral immune response to oxazolone: the isotype switch from specific IgM to IgG1 antibodies is delayed, whereas the IgM response is unaltered. In addition, a single antibody injection results in sustained polyclonal unresponsiveness of T cells irrespective of antigen priming and CD2 modulation. These results document that CD2-mediated signals induce a state of T cell unresponsiveness in vivo.
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1 November 1991
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November 01 1991
Anti-CD2 antibodies induce T cell unresponsiveness in vivo.
B Gückel,
B Gückel
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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C Berek,
C Berek
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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M Lutz,
M Lutz
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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P Altevogt,
P Altevogt
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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V Schirrmacher,
V Schirrmacher
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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B A Kyewski
B A Kyewski
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
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B Gückel
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
C Berek
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
M Lutz
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
P Altevogt
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
V Schirrmacher
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
B A Kyewski
Institute for Immunology and Genetics, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg.
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
J Exp Med (1991) 174 (5): 957–967.
Citation
B Gückel, C Berek, M Lutz, P Altevogt, V Schirrmacher, B A Kyewski; Anti-CD2 antibodies induce T cell unresponsiveness in vivo.. J Exp Med 1 November 1991; 174 (5): 957–967. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.174.5.957
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