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Regulation of IgA secretion by T cell clones derived from the human gastrointestinal tract.

Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (1988-03-15)
E B Benson, W Strober
RÉSUMÉ

The role of T cells in Ig isotype regulation is still unclear. To address this question, we generated mitogen-stimulated T cell clones from normal human lymphoid follicles of the gut-associated lymphoid tissue (appendix). Both the T cell clones and clonal supernatants provided preferential help for IgA secretion by PWM-stimulated B cells. Many of these CD3+, CD4+, 4B4+, DR+ helper clones co-expressed Fc-gamma and Fc-alpha R, but there was poor correlation between the expression of Fc-alpha R and IgA help (p = 0.31). Most of the T cell clones helped both IgM+A- and IgM-A+ B cell populations to secrete IgA, suggesting that they mediate switch of isotype-uncommitted B cells as well as post-switch expansion of IgA-committed B cells; however, some of the T cell clones helped IgM+A- B cell populations much more than IgM-A+ B cell populations, suggesting that, in this case, the regulatory effect is predominantly at the level of B cell switch. In all, these results show that the mucosal immune system contains individual T cells which are capable of positively regulating IgA-specific isotype differentiation at two levels of B cell development, thus allowing for efficient generation of IgA-secreting B cells.