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1.
The murine Ly-6 locus controls multiple cell surface antigenic specificities with distinct cellular and tissue distributions. Although the functions of Ly-6 antigens are unknown, several of these antigens represent interesting markers of T cell differentiation and activation. In this work we used a panel of monoclonal antibodies (MAb) in conjunction with flow cytofluorometry (FCF) analysis to investigate the effect of interferon (IFN) on the surface representation of T cell-associated Ly-6 antigens. It was found that in vitro treatment of purified T cells from both C57Bl/6 (Ly-6.2) and BALB/c (Ly-6.1) mice with 10 to 10(4) U IFN-alpha/beta/ml results in a dose-dependent enhancement of Ly-6 antigen expression. This effect was already detectable after 12 to 18 hr and culminated after 48 hr of incubation. Both frequencies and brightness of Ly-6 bearing cells were increased. The most dramatic shifts were observed for the Ly-6A, D, and E antigens, which were augmented by eightfold to 20-fold upon exposure to 10(4) U IFN alpha/beta/ml. Expression of Ly-6C antigens was enhanced by fourfold to sixfold under the same conditions. Immunochemical analyses and use of metabolic inhibitors additionally demonstrated that such IFN-alpha/beta-induced phenotypic alterations of T cells reflect augmented de novo biosynthesis of Ly-6 molecules. Comparison of purified IFN-alpha and IFN-beta revealed that both are equally active in influencing Ly-6. IFN-gamma also enhanced Ly-6 expression but less efficiently than IFN-alpha/beta. Additional experiments were carried out to determine the selectivity of IFN-alpha/beta action on T cell phenotype. These studies demonstrated that IFN-induced Ly-6 enhancement occurs without emergence of interleukin 2 or transferrin receptors. Expression of H-2 and beta 2m antigens, previously known to be sensitive to IFN, was increased but to a much lesser extent than Ly-6. Most other cell surface antigens examined were minimally affected by IFN-alpha/beta with the exception of Ly-11 and Ly-23. Augmentation of these latter markers was lower than for Ly-6 antigens, however. Therefore the Ly-6 locus appears to be preferentially activated by IFN-alpha/beta in resting T cells. Additional exploration of this phenomenon should provide insight into both the biological significance of Ly-6 antigens and the mechanism(s) by which IFN affect T cell functions.  相似文献   

2.
The murine Ly-6A cell surface antigen is normally present on a minor subset of mature T cells. This marker has been shown to become highly expressed on mitogen-activated T cells. We found that expression of Ly-6A is also markedly increased in resting T cells by incubation with IFN-alpha/beta or IFN-gamma. Here, we compared the effect of the immunosuppressant cyclosporine A (CsA) on Ly-6A induction by IFN and concanavalin A (Con A). The augmentation of Ly-6A expression produced by treatment of T cells with IFN-alpha/beta or IFN-gamma was found not to be affected by CsA concentrations up to 2 micrograms/ml. In contrast, at doses as low as 50 ng/ml, CsA prevented the enhancement of Ly-6A expression in Con A-treated T-cell cultures. Culture supernatant transfer experiments were performed to further explore this effect of CsA. It was found that supernatants from Con A-activated T cells enhanced Ly-6A expression in resting T cells. This activity could be neutralized with an anti-IFN-gamma monoclonal antibody. Supernatants from T cells treated with Con A in presence of CsA lacked Ly-6A-enhancing activity. Taken together, these data suggest that the inhibition by CsA of Ly-6A induction in Con A-treated T cells reflects the known inhibitory effects of the drug on IFN-gamma secretion. This may imply the existence in T cells of an autocrine circuit involving IFN-gamma and regulating Ly-6A expression.  相似文献   

3.
The cell surface Ly-6E antigen, known to play a role in T cell activation, is up-regulated by IFNs. In the present study, we investigated the possible interactions between IFNs and other cytokines in this regulation. As a model system, we used the YAC T cell lymphoma, in which Ly-6E is normally absent but can be highly induced both at the mRNA and surface protein levels by IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta. The combination of the two IFNs was found to result in markedly synergistic Ly-6E induction in this cell line. Moreover, mutants of YAC cells were isolated that did not respond to the Ly-6E-inducing action of IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta alone but did respond to their combination. Such a synergistic interaction is consistent with the notion that the two IFN types utilize different intracellular mechanisms to induce Ly-6E expression. Ly-6E induction mediated by IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta was also enhanced by cotreatment with TNF-alpha or IL-1 alpha, which by themselves had no detectable Ly-6E-inducing effect. These two cytokines similarly synergized with IFNs to trigger a response in several Ly-6E-induction-deficient mutants. However, their action could be dissociated in one mutant (B54) where the response to IFN-alpha/beta was enhanced by TNF-alpha, but not by IL-1 alpha. Altogether, these data indicate that Ly-6E antigen expression is regulated by the interaction of several inflammatory cytokines, which may provide a mechanism for the local modulation of T cell activation. The YAC cell mutants described here should facilitate further analysis of the molecular bases of Ly-6E regulation.  相似文献   

4.
5.
This study was initiated to examine the role of cyclic nucleotides in the regulation of the expression of the Ly-6E cell surface Ag by IFN. As a model system, we used the YAC T cell lymphoma where this Ag is constitutively absent but is highly inducible by both IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta. Treatment with cAMP or cGMP analogs did not cause Ly-6E expression in the absence of IFN. However, treatment with cAMP analogs, but not with cGMP analogs, markedly altered Ly-6E expression triggered by IFN, both at the mRNA and at the cell surface protein levels. Interestingly, these effects depended on whether Ly-6E induction was mediated by IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta. Thus, the response to IFN-gamma was enhanced up to tenfold, whereas the response to IFN-alpha/beta was suppressed by 90-95%. Similar differential modulations of Ly-6E induction were also exerted by forskolin and cholera toxin, which are known to elevate intracellular cAMP concentration through distinct mechanisms. A YAC cell variant (C10) was isolated, where cAMP analogs or cAMP inducers could not modify Ly-6E induction. Although resistant to the biological effect of cAMP, the C10 mutant exhibited normal IFN-mediated Ly-6E responses. Moreover, in this mutant, Ly-6E induction was still affected by the PKC activator PMA, as in wild-type YAC cells. Altogether, our data demonstrate that cAMP (and cGMP) is not directly involved as second messenger in Ly-6E induction mediated by IFNs. However, a rise of cAMP modulates in an opposite fashion the Ly-6E-inducing actions of IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta, which suggests that the two types of IFN utilize separate biochemical pathways to regulate Ly-6E expression.  相似文献   

6.
The murine Ly-6A.2 and Ly-6E.1 antigens, which can transduce triggering signals in T cells, have been shown to become highly expressed after mitogenic stimulation. It has recently been found that enhanced expression of Ly-6A/E antigens is also induced by interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in resting T cells. Here, the possibility is investigated that Ly-6A/E induction on activated T cells may be due to the IFN-gamma known to be secreted by these cells. A potent neutralizing anti-IFN-gamma monoclonal antibody (mAb) (H-22.10) was used. This mAb was found to abrogate the augmentation of Ly-6A/E antigens produced in resting T cells by supernatants from T cells stimulated with concanavalin A. When added directly into cultures of T cells stimulated with concanavalin A or by the combination of ionomycin with the protein kinase C activator phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), the H-22.10 mAb inhibited Ly-6A/E enhancement without affecting the blastogenesis or the emergence of interleukin 2 receptors and transferrin receptors. Such a selective effect of the anti-IFN-gamma mAb indicated that IFN-gamma is involved in the up-regulation of Ly-6A/E antigens during T cell activation. In determining whether other activation signals, in addition to IFN-gamma receptor occupancy, may contribute to Ly-6A/E enhancement, it was found that suboptimal stimulation of BALB/c T cells provided by a 3-hr pulse with ionomycin plus PMA or by culture with PMA alone potentiated by about twofold the increase of Ly-6E.1 induced by exogenous IFN-gamma. Therefore, Ly-6A/E augmentation in activated T cells reflects primarily an action of endogenous IFN-gamma that is amplified (in BALB/c mice) by a protein kinase C-dependent step.  相似文献   

7.
The YAC T cell lymphoma normally does not express Ly-6E mRNA or Ly-6E surface molecules but can be induced to do so on incubation with either IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta. This system afforded a model to assess the possible role of protein kinase C (PKC) in IFN-mediated Ly-6E induction. First, we used various pharmacologic agents known to interfere with the function of PKC or other kinases. The PKC inhibitors H-7 and phloretin were found to block Ly-6E induction by IFN-gamma or IFN-alpha/beta both at the mRNA and protein levels. In contrast, inhibitors of cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases (HA1004), of myosin L chain kinase (ML-9, A-3) or of calmodulin (R24157, W-7) failed to suppress this induction. Next, we investigated the effects of the PKC activators PMA and mezerein (MEZ) on Ly-6E expression. Although neither PMA nor MEZ by themselves could induce Ly-6E in YAC cells, both agents enhanced by up to fivefold the induction of Ly-6 mRNA and Ly-6E surface expression triggered by IFN-gamma. However, the induction of Ly-6E expression caused by IFN-alpha/beta was only marginally increased by cotreatment of YAC cells with PMA or MEZ. Altogether, these observations demonstrate that PKC or a related kinase is involved in the transduction mechanisms that lead to Ly-6E induction. However, activation of PKC is not sufficient for this induction and requires other unidentified signal(s) provided by IFN. Our data also indicate that IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta induce Ly-6E through overlapping but distinct intracellular pathways with different sensitivities to PKC activators.  相似文献   

8.
We have previously reported that mouse bone marrow (BM) cells stimulated with alloantigen produce cytotoxic effector T-cell activity and produce interferon (IFN-)alpha/beta. In this report we show evidence suggesting that interleukin 2 (IL-2) may play a role in this IFN-alpha/beta production by alloantigen-stimulated BM cells. Alloantigen-induced IFN production by bone marrow cells was completely inhibited when cultures were supplemented with antisera to IL-2. Cell-free supernatants obtained at 2 days from cultures containing C57BL/6 BM cells and irradiated DBA/2J spleen cells were also shown to contain low levels of IL-2 activity and induced significant IFN production in fresh BM cells. Different IL-2 preparations were tested for their ability to induce IFN-alpha/beta production in mouse BM cells. Mouse BM cells cultured with recombinant human IL-2 or highly purified mouse IL-2 produced high levels of IFN-alpha/beta activity after 2-3 days of culture with significant IFN activity being detected as early as 24 hr of culture. IL-2-induced IFN-alpha/beta production was partially resistant to irradiation. In contrast, irradiated (2000 rad) bone marrow cells failed to produce any IFN when cultured with alloantigen in the absence of IL-2. T-cell-depleted BM cells or BM cells obtained from C57BL/10 nude mice produced high levels of IFN-alpha/beta following stimulation with IL-2. In addition, bone marrow cells depleted of Ia+, Qa 5+, or Asialo GM+1 cells produced IFN in response to IL-2. Thus, neither T cells nor NK cells are required for IL-2-induced IFN-alpha/beta production by BM cells. The action of IL-2 on bone marrow cells to induce IFN production was mediated by the classical IL-2 receptor, since monoclonal antibodies to the IL-2 receptor present on T cells blocked this response and since bone marrow cells depleted of IL-2 receptor-bearing cells failed to produce IFN when cultured with IL-2. These results suggest that non-T cells resident in the BM have receptors for IL-2 and can produce IFN-alpha/beta upon stimulation by IL-2. Since IFN has been shown to affect different aspects of hematopoiesis, the production of IFN by BM cells stimulated by IL-2 may be important in the control of hematopoiesis. In addition, IL-2-induced IFN production may play a role in graft-versus-host disease.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of cyclosporin A (CsA) on the production of gamma interferon (IFN gamma) versus IFN alpha/beta was studied using mouse and human lymphocytes and fibroblasts. Spleen cells from C57Bl/6 mice produced low but significant levels (40-60 U/ml) of IFN gamma after 2 to 3 days of culture with irradiated DBA spleen cells. The addition of CsA at concentrations as low as 0.1 microgram/ml completely inhibited (less than 10 U/ml) IFN gamma production in these cultures. High levels of IFN gamma (170-1200 U/ml) were produced when either C57Bl/6 spleen cells or Ficoll-Hypaque-purified human peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) were cultured with the T-cell mitogen staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA). The addition of CsA (0.1 microgram/ml) to these cultures also completely inhibited (less than 10 U/ml) IFN gamma production. This inhibition was shown not to be due to a change in the kinetics of IFN gamma production or to a change in the amount of SEA required for stimulation. IFN gamma production in SEA-stimulated mouse spleen cells was inhibited at 3 days of culture even when CsA was added at 24 or 48 hr postculture initiation. Thus, CsA inhibits IFN gamma production even when early events associated with lymphocyte activation have been allowed to take place. In contrast to IFN gamma production, IFN alpha/beta production by Newcastle disease virus (NDV)-infected mouse and human lymphocytes or fibroblasts was not inhibited by the addition of CsA (1 microgram/ml). CsA also did not block the action of IFN gamma or IFN alpha/beta since addition of CsA (1 microgram/ml) to reference IFN standards had no effect on their antiviral activity. Thus, CsA inhibits the production of IFN gamma by T cells but appears to have no effect on the production of IFN alpha/beta by virus-infected cells or on the antiviral action of already produced IFN gamma and IFN alpha/beta.  相似文献   

10.
Lymphoblastoid and fibroblast IFN inhibited PHA stimulation of overall protein synthesis in human lymphocytes by ca. 30%. Inhibition occurred within the first 6 hr of PHA treatment and was not progressive. DNA synthesis at 48 hr was inhibited to the same extent. Overall protein synthesis in resting lymphocytes was not detectably inhibited by IFN concentrations up to 1000 U/ml. Thus, inhibition of protein synthesis and subsequent reduction of cell proliferation by IFN require certain early events in mitogen activation. Resting lymphocytes were not unresponsive to IFN treatment, however. Two-dimensional electrophoretic analysis of newly synthesized proteins after IFN treatment showed enhanced synthesis of a specific set of eight peptides (I-peptides), which were shown to be synthesized in T lymphocytes. This enhancement was produced by both IFN-alpha and IFN-beta after 4 to 6 hr of exposure and was identical for all lymphocyte donors studied. After growth stimulation, IFN treatment produced no enhancements of additional peptides, although the original eight I-peptides were enhanced as usual. It is concluded that the biochemical activities of the I-peptides, which remain to be determined, cannot inhibit protein synthesis in resting lymphocytes, but may do so after mitogen activation, when the major physiologic restriction of lymphocyte protein synthesis is released. Alternatively, the I-peptides may be unrelated to regulation of protein synthesis but may be involved in viral protection or enhancement of NK activity.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The PCl-6 T cell line, derived from mice sensitized by skin painting with picryl chloride (PCl), shows antigen dependence for DNA synthesis and for lymphotoxin (LT) production. These cells produce LT, but not interferon (IFN), when exposed to 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid- (TNBS) coupled syngeneic spleen cells. Concanavalin A (Con A) induces IFN production by PCl-6 cells, and IFN levels, but not LT titers, are increased by treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). These results support the noncoordinate regulation of these two lymphokines. Line 32, a T cell growth factor- (TCGF) dependent T cell line and its Ly-1.2+, 2.2- derivative clone, 32H1, produce both antiviral and antiproliferative activity after exposure to several different mitogens. Tests for acid lability, sensitivity to anti-mouse IFN-alpha, beta antisera, and antiproliferative activity on non-mouse target cells indicates that an Ly-1+ clone, in the absence of both TCGF and accessory cells, can produce at least three separate lymphokine activities after Con A exposure: IFN-gamma (Type II), IFN-alpha, beta (Type I), and LT.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Production of interferon (IFN) by Listeria monocytogenes (LM) in nonimmunized mouse spleen cell cultures was studied. IFN-gamma defined by virtue of its acid stability and antigenicity was produced in spleen cell cultures obtained from ddY mice, C57BL/6 mice, and BALB/c mice in response to heat-killed (HK) LM within 24 hr. On the other hand, production of IFN-alpha/beta was demonstrated in spleen cell cultures obtained from one of four nude mice (BALB/c, nu/nu). Therefore, it is important to know the reason why the spleen cells of mice other than nude mice did produce only IFN-gamma, but did not produce IFN-alpha/beta in response to HK-LM. Spleen cells obtained from ddY mice were fractionated, and the cellular source for IFN production of either IFN-alpha/beta or IFN-gamma induced by HK-LM was investigated. IFN-gamma was produced only by a mixture of T lymphocytes (nylon wool-nonadherent, Thy-1-positive cells) and macrophages by HK-LM. Neither T lymphocytes nor macrophages alone produced IFN by HK-LM. Macrophage-depleted spleen cells produced neither IFN-gamma nor IFN-alpha/beta, but these cells acquired the ability to produce IFN-alpha/beta, not IFN-gamma, only when they had been treated with IFN-alpha/beta. A possible mechanism of both IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta induction by Listeria in mouse spleen cell cultures is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
We have previously reported that mouse bone marrow cells produce high levels of interferon-alpha/beta (IFN-alpha/beta) after 5 to 6 days of in vitro culture with irradiated allogenic spleen cells. The current study was initiated to determine whether or not T cells are important for alloantigen-induced IFN-alpha/beta production by mouse bone marrow cells. Bone marrow cells and spleen cells were obtained from C57BL/6 mice. These cells were treated with different monoclonal antisera and complement, and then were cultured 5 to 6 days with irradiated DBA spleen cells. The results from these experiments indicated that optimal IFN-alpha/beta production by alloantigen-stimulated bone marrow cells required Lyt-1+2+ T cells. In addition, when bone marrow cells obtained from nu/nu B10 mice were cultured with alloantigen, only low levels of IFN were produced when compared with IFN production by bone marrow cells obtained from normal littermate B10 mice. The addition of nylon wool-enriched splenic T cells to cultures containing bone marrow cells and alloantigen resulted in an augmentation of IFN-alpha/beta production by three-fold to fivefold. Furthermore, bone marrow cells obtained from alloantigen-immunized mice produced much higher levels of IFN-alpha/beta and in a shorter period of time (2 to 3 days) when compared with bone marrow cells obtained from control or non-immunized mice. Cyclosporin A (CsA) has been shown to inhibit predominantly T cell-dependent responses. The effect of CsA on IFN production by alloantigen-stimulated bone marrow and spleen cells was investigated. The addition of CsA at concentrations as low as 0.1 micrograms/ml inhibited not only IFN-gamma production by alloantigen-stimulated spleen cells, but also IFN-alpha/beta production by alloantigen-stimulated bone marrow cells. In contrast, IFN-alpha/beta production by Newcastle disease virus-infected spleen cells, bone marrow cells, or L cells was not inhibited by the addition of CsA (1 microgram/ml). Thus, the ability of bone marrow cells to produce high levels of IFN-alpha/beta after in vitro culture with alloantigen is dependent upon T cells resident in the bone marrow. IFN-alpha/beta production by alloantigen-stimulated bone marrow cells may play a major role in the pathogenesis associated with graft-vs-host disease and in T cell regulation of hematopoiesis.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Interferon (IFN)-alpha/beta was induced in the circulation of mice infected intravenously with Listeria monocytogenes 24 to 72 hr after infection, but was not induced by the administration of heat-killed Listeria, listerial cell wall fraction (LCWF), or listerial soluble fraction. Appearance of IFN-alpha/beta showed a pattern similar to that of the growth of bacteria in the spleen and the liver of mice. IFN-alpha/beta production was abrogated by pretreatment of mice with anti-asialo GM1 antibody, antithymocyte serum, or hydrocortisone, but not with cyclophosphamide or carrageenan. Such treatments which suppressed IFN-alpha/beta production did not influence bacterial growth in the organs of mice in the early stage of Listeria infection. Administration of IFN-alpha/beta exogenously also did not. After 5 days of infection when the specific resistance against reinfection with Listeria was established, IFN-gamma but not IFN-alpha/beta was induced in the circulation 3 to 6 hr after stimulation with LCWF or reinfection with Listeria. IFN-gamma production was abrogated completely by cyclophosphamide and antithymocyte serum, and partially by hydrocortisone and carrageenan, but not by anti-asialo GM1 antibody in Listeria-infected mice treated with these agents before induction of IFN-gamma by LCWF. Presumably, IFN-alpha/beta might be produced by asialo GM1-bearing cells but IFN-gamma might not. However, IFN-gamma production was suppressed in Listeria-infected mice, when IFN-alpha/beta production had been inhibited by treatment with anti-asialo GM1 antibody or when the IFN produced had been neutralized with anti-mouse IFN-alpha/beta antibody. Therefore, it is conceivable that IFN-alpha/beta might be essential for the generation or the expression of antigen-specific T cells involving IFN-gamma production and acquired resistance during Listeria infection. In fact, the bacterial growth in the organs of mice in the early stage of infection was normal in IFN-alpha/beta-depleted mice but it resulted in the delay of T-cell-dependent elimination of bacteria from the organs of mice in the late stage.  相似文献   

18.
Sequential production of interferon (IFN)-alpha/beta and IFN-gamma in the circulation of mice which had been previously infected with viable Listeria monocytogenes was induced by injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) derived from Salmonella typhimurium. IFN-alpha/beta production occurred 2 hr after injection of LPS, thereafter IFN-gamma appeared and the maximum titer was demonstrated at 6 hr. At that time, almost all of the IFN was IFN-gamma. IFN-gamma production in response to LPS was observed from the 5th through the 11th day after infection with Listeria, but it was not demonstrated in either mice infected with lower doses of viable Listeria or mice immunized with heat-killed bacteria. IFN-alpha/beta production was not drastically affected by treatment with hydrocortisone, cyclophosphamide, carrageenan, antithymocyte serum, or anti-asialo GM1 antibody, whereas IFN-gamma production was suppressed by administration of all those agents. Noteworthily, IFN-alpha/beta, but not IFN-gamma, was produced even 6 hr after stimulation with LPS in cyclophosphamide- or antithymocyte serum-treated mice. IFN-gamma induction by LPS was markedly suppressed in mice in which IFN-alpha/beta produced by Listeria infection itself had been depleted by treatment with anti-mouse IFN-alpha/beta antibody, but it was not inhibited in mice when IFN-alpha/beta induced not by Listeria infection but by LPS had been depleted by treatment with anti-mouse IFN-alpha/beta antibody.  相似文献   

19.
The T suppressor (Ts) cell response in contact sensitivity is preferentially inhibited by murine interferon-alpha, beta (IFN-alpha, beta) in vivo. Previous studies in vivo have suggested that IFN exerts its effect directly on the Ts subpopulation rather than through an effect on antigen-presenting macrophages. Nevertheless, the mechanism of this selective blockade remained unclear. To better define the mechanism(s) of inhibition of suppression by IFN-alpha, beta, we determined whether IFN acted on lymphocytes, macrophages, or both. Antigen-specific T effector cells of delayed-type hypersensitivity (TDH) and Ts cells were induced in vitro by co-culture of spleen lymphocytes with bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting macrophages (BM-MA) pulse-labeled with 2,4-dinitrobenzene sulfonate (DNBSO3). TDH or Ts activity was demonstrated by transfer of the lymphocytes into naive recipient BALB/c mice after 3 days of culture. BM-MA cultured for 5 to 7 days (BM-MA d5-7) before labeling preferentially activated TDH cells (Thy-1+, Lyt-1+2-); 10- to 14-day-old BM-MA (BM-MA d10) induced Ts cells (Thy-1+, Lyt-2+), as previously shown. Treatment of the spleen lymphocyte suspension with pure mouse IFN-alpha, beta at a dose of 10(3) U/10(8) cells completely blocked the induction of Ts cells but had no effect on the induction of TDH cells. Pretreatment of the antigen-presenting BM-MA for 24 hr with IFN (10(2) U/3 X 10(5) cells) had no effect on the induction of Ts and TDH cells. Cultivation of lymphocytes on a DNP-BM-MA d6 monolayer did not result in the induction of Ts cells; however, in the presence of a goat anti-murine IFN-alpha, beta antibody, Ts cells were induced. This finding indicates that the spontaneous release of IFN-alpha, beta in those cultures prevented the induction of Ts cells. These results confirm our previous observation that Ts cells are more easily blocked by IFN-alpha, beta than TDH cells, and demonstrate that IFN affects the Ts subpopulation not via modulation of the antigen-presenting macrophages. IFN-alpha, beta-producing, antigen-presenting, or accessory cells may therefore prevent the activation of this type of Ts cell.  相似文献   

20.
Preexposure of resident mouse peritoneal macrophages for 1 hr to traces of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (less than or equal to 1 ng/ml) rendered the cells refractory to activation by recombinant interferon-gamma (rIFN gamma) or recombinant tumor necrosis factor-alpha (rTNF alpha), as evaluated by release of H2O2 upon stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate. Inhibition persisted for at least 4 days. Fifty percent inhibition of activation mediated by rIFN gamma followed 1 hr exposure to 10 pg/ml LPS. Fifty percent inhibition of activation mediated by rTNF alpha was achieved with 1 hr exposure to 1 pg/ml LPS. Such low levels LPS exposures (concentration X time) are far below those reported for many other actions of LPS on host cells. Inhibition was partially prevented by the cyclooxygenase inhibitors indomethacin, ibuprofen, and acetylsalicylic acid. Exogenous prostaglandins PGE1 and PGE2, and the 3',5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate analog dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), mimicked the inhibitory effect of LPS in a dose-dependent manner, consistent with the hypothesis that formation of endogenous cyclooxygenase products in response to LPS may elevate intracellular cAMP and that the latter may mediate the observed inhibition. In addition, neutralizing antibody against IFN alpha and IFN beta selectively prevented LPS inhibition of activation mediated by rIFN gamma, but not by rTNF alpha. This suggests that IFN alpha and/or IFN beta induced by LPS also contributed to inhibition of activation by rIFN gamma. Thus, release of LPS may afford microorganisms a means by which to interfere with immunologically mediated enhancement of the respiratory burst-dependent antimicrobial capacity of macrophages.  相似文献   

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