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Adoptive transfer of antigen-specific CD25 + CD4 + regulatory T cells was used to analyze the stability of their phenotype, their behavior after immunization, and their mode of suppressing cotransferred naive T cells in vivo . We found that regulatory T cells maintained their phenotype in the absence of antigen, were not anergic in vivo , and proliferated as extensively as naive CD4 + T cells after immunization without losing their suppressive function in vivo and in vitro. In vivo , the expansion of cotransferred naive T cells was suppressed relatively late in the response such that regulatory T cells expressing mostly IL-10 but not IL-2 or IFN-γ represented the dominant subset of cells. Our results reveal properties of regulatory T cells that were not predicted from in vitro studies.
Klein et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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