T cell recognition and tolerance of antibody diversity.

The capacity of B cells to self-present their Ab variable regions in the context of class II MHC structures suggests a potential regulatory problem. If T cells were able to recognize self-presented Ab, then T cell help might be delivered to B cells independently of a foreign carrier epitope, resulting in a chronic state of unregulated Ab synthesis. For this reason, we have proposed that T cells normally attain a state of tolerance to Ab V region diversity. Here, we tested this idea by performing direct immunizations with unmutated isologous mAb. We also identified and analyzed epitopes recognized by class II MHC-restricted T cell hybridomas that were originally generated against two physiologically mutated isologous mAb. Our results indicate that the class II MHC-restricted T cell repertoire is tolerant of germ-line-encoded Ab diversity and that the physiologic somatic hypermutation process creates immunogenic epitopes in Ab V regions, in some cases by producing class II MHC-binding peptides. In agreement with these findings, we found that germ-line-encoded Ab V regions are presented by endogenous splenic APC at a level that is physiologically significant.