Mechanism underlying superantigen-induced clonal deletion of mature T lymphocytes.

We observed that peripheral T cells activated in vivo or in vitro by superantigens are susceptible to cell death when their antigen receptor is cross-linked with the appropriate anti-alpha beta TCR mAb. TCR ligation by mAbs specifically drove the T cell clonal deletion in both CD4+ and CD8+ cell subsets. An IL-2/IL-2R interaction seems to be a critical step in predisposing superantigen activated cells to death; in fact, in vivo IL-2R blockade reversed T cell deletion in superantigen plus anti-alpha beta TCR mAb treated mice. TCR ligation by mAbs also produced cell death of the relevant targets in in vitro IL-2 activated T cells. Surprisingly, no T cell deletion was demonstrable in IL-2 activated cells following staphylococcal enterotoxin B--TCR interaction, ruling out the possibility that superantigen in itself can induce cell death. Thus, while superantigen activation opens the cell death program, a subsequent TCR--antigen (self) interaction appears necessary to produce clonal deletion in mature T lymphocytes.