Abstract: | During the secondary mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR), i.e. after the double in vitro allogenic sensitization between responding and stimulating cells bearing at least one HLA-DR incompatibility, suppressor cells are developed 1]. They are able to inhibit a primary MLR provided that the stimulating cells possess the same DR incompatibility as the immunizing cells. We report here that this inhibition is due to the production by these cells of a soluble suppressor factor which acts on responding cells provided that they share at least one gene product of the HLA-D region with the cells producing the factor. This a feedback process of auto-inhibition occurring after hyperimmunization. The action of this suppressor factor seems to be genetically restricted to an as yet unknown locus in linkage disequilibrium with HLA-DR. |