The Journal of Experimental Medicine
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0022-1007/1999/2/593/ $5.00
The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Volume 189, Number 3, February 1, 1999 593-598


Brief Definitive Reports

Antigen-pulsed CD8{alpha}+ Dendritic Cells Generate an Immune Response after Subcutaneous Injection without Homing to the Draining Lymph Node

Adrian L. Smith and Barbara Fazekas de St. Groth

From the Centenary Institute of Cancer Medicine and Cell Biology, Newtown, New South Wales, Australia, 2042

Two subsets of murine splenic dendritic cells, derived from distinct precursors, can be distinguished by surface expression of CD8{alpha} homodimers. The functions of the two subsets remain controversial, although it has been suggested that the lymphoid-derived (CD8{alpha}+) subset induces tolerance, whereas the myeloid-derived (CD8{alpha}) subset has been shown to prime naive T cells and to generate memory responses. To study their capacity to prime or tolerize naive CD4+ T cells in vivo, purified CD8{alpha}+ or CD8{alpha} dendritic cells were injected subcutaneously into normal mice. In contrast to CD8{alpha} dendritic cells, the CD8{alpha}+ fraction failed to traffic to the draining lymph node and did not generate responses to intravenous peptide. However, after in vitro pulsing with peptide, strong in vivo T cell responses to purified CD8{alpha}+ dendritic cells could be detected. Such responses may have been initiated via transfer of peptide–major histocompatibility complex complexes to migratory host CD8{alpha} dendritic cells after injection. These data suggest that correlation of T helper cell type 1 (Th1) and Th2 priming with injection of CD8{alpha}+ and CD8{alpha} dendritic cells, respectively, may not result from direct T cell activation by lymphoid versus myeloid dendritic cells, but rather from indirect modification of the response to immunogenic CD8{alpha} dendritic cells by CD8{alpha}+ dendritic cells.

Key Words: dendritic cell • T cell • antigen presentation • tolerance


Address correspondence to Barbara Fazekas de St. Groth, Centenary Institute of Cancer Medicine and Cell Biology, Locked Bag No. 6, Newtown, NSW, Australia, 2042. Phone: 61-2-9565-6137; Fax: 61-2-9565-6103; E-mail: b.fazekas{at}centenary.usyd.edu.au


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