Abstract
Helper T-cell clones were isolated from BALB/c mice that had been inoculated with purified light chain (HA2) from H3 subtype influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA). The clones were divided into two distinct groups based on their ability to proliferate in response to bromelain-derived HA (BHA) and the light chain derived from it (BHA2), both of which lack the C-terminal 46 amino acid residues of the HA2 chain. The first group contained two I-Ad restricted clones that proliferated in response to BHA and BHA2 and were found to recognize the determinant 96AELLVALEN104. The remaining seven clones were I-Ed restricted, required intact HA2 for proliferation, and responded to synthetic peptides containing the sequence 170RFQIKGVEL178 which spans the bromelain cleavage site. Although all T-cell clones proliferated in response to a wide range of different H3 virus strains, they showed no cross-reactivity with viruses of the H1 or H2 subtype. The T-cell clones from each group were able to provide help to virus-primed B cells allowing them to produce anti-HA antibody in vitro.