Science, Vol.263, No.5150, 1139-1143, 1994
T-Cell Deletion in High Antigen Dose Therapy of Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis
Encounters with antigen can stimulate T cells to become activated and proliferate, become nonresponsive to antigen, or to die. T cell death was shown to be a physiological response to interleukin-2-stimulated cell cycling and T cell receptor reengagement at high antigen doses. This feedback regulatory mechanism attenuates the immune response by deleting a portion of newly dividing, antigen-reactive T cells. This mechanism deleted autoreactive T cells and abrogated the clinical and pathological signs of autoimmune encephalomyelitis in mice after repetitive administration of myelin basic protein.
Keywords:EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS;MYELIN BASIC-PROTEIN;LYMPHOCYTES-T;CLONAL ANERGY;INVITRO;INTERLEUKIN-2;TOLERANCE;SUPPRESSION;ACTIVATION;RECEPTOR