Defective thymic education of L3T4+ T helper cell function in graft-vs-host mice.

Our study investigates the effect of a prior graft-vs-host (GVH) reaction on the subsequent ability of irradiated, bone marrow-re-populated mice to develop T cell function. The results indicate that such GVH-bone marrow transplanted (BMT) mice do not generate CTL responses to trinitrophenyl-modified syngeneic cells (TNP-self), but do generate strong CTL activity to H-2 alloantigens. This selective deficiency in TNP-self CTL response potential appeared as early as 10 days after GVH, and required both L3T4+ and Lyt-2+ donor T cells. The in vitro addition of either soluble Th factors or L3T4-enriched spleen cells from normal mice circumvented the defect in the TNP-self response in GVH-BMT mice. These results indicate that T effector function was not defective, and instead suggest a Th defect. Cell depletion and antibody-blocking, as well as IL-2 production experiments, indicate that the Th defect was selective for L3T4+ Th population and not for Lyt-2+ Th population. This defect in L3T4 Th function is not accounted for by the approximate twofold reduction in L3T4 cell numbers in GVH-BMT mice, because IL-2 production and CTL generation to L3T4-dependent Ag were at least eightfold below control levels. Rather, defective L3T4 Th function appears to be the consequence of a GVH-induced defect in thymic maturation because the defect was corrected in vivo by a neonatal parental thymus graft before irradiation and bone marrow transplantation. This system may be useful for elucidating the role of the thymus in the maturation of Th cells. Our findings raise the possibility that impaired development of T cell function occurring in marrow grafted patients who have undergone a GVH reaction could be partly due to a GVH-induced thymic defect.