Local regulation of immune responses: corneal endothelial cells alter t cell activation and cytokine production |
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Authors: | Mi P Gregerson D S Kawashima H |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA. |
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Abstract: | Corneal endothelial cells (CE cells) inhibit antigen- and mitogen-activated lymphocyte proliferation assays, although interleukin 2 receptor (IL-2R) expression and responsiveness to exogenous IL-2 are unaffected. To examine this activity further, co-cultures of CE cells and T cell clones were studied. CE cells inhibited IL-2 and IL-4 production by T cells stimulated with Ag and APC, but not IL-5 or IL-6 production. CE cells also inhibited NFAT-driven lacZ reporter gene production following Ag stimulation of transfected KZO T hybridoma cells. Conversely, stimulation of IL-2 production by ionomycin, with or without PMA, was unaffected by the CE cells. Preincubation of KZO hybridoma or Jurkat cells with CE cells, or CE cell-conditioned culture supernatant, inhibited the intracellular calcium ([Ca(2+)](i)) increase induced by TCR ligation, but not the [Ca(2+)](i)increase induced by ionomycin or thapsigargin. The inhibitory effect was independent of APC and did not act by blocking costimulation, since IL-2 production stimulated by immobilized anti-CD3 alone was also inhibited by CE cells. The supernatant factor was heat labile. This novel activity is unlike other immunoregulatory molecules, including transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) and may contribute to local immune privilege. |
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