Anti-recipient cytotoxic T lymphocyte precursors are present in the spleens of mice with acute graft versus host disease due to minor histocompatibility antigens.
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A model for bone marrow transplantation across minor histocompatibility barriers was developed by using mouse strains that were H-2 identical and mutually non-reactive in MLC. Acute graft-vs-host disease was induced only when donor lymphoid cells were included in the marrow inoculum, in both C57BL/6 recipients of LP cells and BALB/c recipients of B10.D2/nSN cells. GVHD was prevented by treating the lymphoid cells with anti-Thy 1.2 and C before transplantation. Spleen cells from mice with acute GVHD were not directly cytotoxic to recipient strain target cells. However, when spleen cells from mice with GVHD were boosted in vitro to recipient strain stimulator cells they generated a specific anti-recipient cytotoxic response. Spleen cells from mice without GVHD did not generate a cytotoxic response in vitro. The cytotoxic effector cells and their precursors were shown to be T lymphocytes. This model and the in vitro method described may be useful in further studies of the immunobiology of GVHD due to minor histocompatibility antigens and of transplantation tolerance.