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1.
A molecular explanation for "suppressor" macrophage inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation is described. NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (NGMMA), a specific inhibitor of the nitric oxide synthetase pathway, markedly augments Con A-induced proliferation of rat splenic leukocytes. Macrophages are necessary and sufficient for NGMMA-releasable-suppression, as indicated by a loss of suppression after either pretreatment of isolated splenic macrophages with NGMMA or their depletion by plastic adherence or L-leucine methyl ester. L- (but not D-) arginine overrides NGMMA-releasable suppression, and suppression is blocked by RBC as would be expected if nitric oxide were the effector molecule. Unlike rats, NGMMA did not augment Con A-induced proliferation of normal mouse splenic leukocytes. However, NGMMA did augment Con A-induced proliferation of mouse splenic leukocytes induced to contain suppressor macrophages by intravenous injection of Corynebacterium parvum, which suggests a quantitative, not qualitative, difference in suppressor macrophages between rats and mice. Nitrite production, as an indicator of nitric oxide synthesis, correlated with suppressor macrophage activity in rats and mice and was inhibited by NGMMA. Finally, NGMMA also markedly enhanced proliferation with every other mitogen examined (PHA, protein A, PWM, and LPS). It is concluded that immunoregulation of lymphocyte proliferation by suppressor macrophages is mediated, in part, directly or indirectly by products of the nitric oxide synthetase pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Reactive molecules O(-)(2), H(2)O(2), and nitrogen monoxide (NO) are produced from macrophages following exposure to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and involved in cellular signaling for gene expression. Experiments were carried out to determine whether these molecules regulate inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) gene expression in RAW264.7 macrophages exposed to LPS. NO production was inhibited by the antioxidative enzymes catalase, horseradish peroxidase, and myeloperoxidase but not by superoxide dismutase (SOD). In contrast, the NO-producing activity of LPS-stimulated RAW264.7 cells was enhanced by the NO scavengers hemoglobin (Hb) and myoglobin. The antioxidant enzymes decreased levels of iNOS mRNA and protein in LPS-stimulated RAW264.7 cells, whereas the NOS inhibitor N(G)-monomethyl-L-arginine as well as Hb increased the level of iNOS protein but not mRNA, indicating that NO inhibits iNOS protein expression. NF-kappa B was activated in LPS-stimulated RAW264.7 cells and the activation was significantly inhibited by antioxidant enzymes, but not by Hb. Similar results were obtained using LPS-stimulated rodent peritoneal macrophages. Extracellular O(-)(2) generation by LPS-stimulated macrophages was suppressed by SOD, but not by antioxidative enzymes, while accumulation of intracellular reactive oxygen species was inhibited by antioxidative enzymes, but not by SOD. Exogenous H(2)O(2) induced NF-kappa B activation in macrophages, which was inhibited by catalase and pyrroline dithiocarbamate (PDTC). H(2)O(2) enhanced iNOS expression and NO production in peritoneal macrophages when added with interferon-gamma, and the effect of H(2)O(2) was inhibited by catalase and PDTC. These findings suggest that H(2)O(2) production from LPS-stimulated macrophages participates in the upregulation of iNOS expression via NF-kappa B activation and that NO is a negative feedback inhibitor of iNOS protein expression.  相似文献   

3.
We assessed the catalase bioactivity and hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) production rate in human breast cancer (HBC) cell lines and compared these with normal human breast epithelial (HBE) cells. We observed that the bioactivity of catalase was decreased in HBC cells when compared with HBE cells. This was also accompanied by an increase in H(2)O(2) steady-state levels in HBC cells. Silencing the catalase gene led to a further increase in the steady-state level of H(2)O(2) which was also accompanied by an increase in growth rate of HBC cells. Catalase activity was up regulated on treatment with superoxide (O(2)(-)) scavengers such as pegylated SOD (PEG-SOD, indicating inhibition of catalase by the increased O(2)(-) produced by HBC cells. Transfection of either catalase or glutathione peroxidase to HBC cells decreased intracellular H(2)O(2) levels and led to apoptosis of these cells. The H(2)O(2) produced by HBC cells inhibited PP2A activity accompanied by increased phosphorylation of Akt and ERK1/2. The importance of catalase bioactivity in breast cancer was further confirmed as its bioactivity was also decreased in human breast cancer tissues when compared to normal breast tissues. We conclude that inhibition of catalase bioactivity by O(2)(-) leads to an increase in steady-state levels of H(2)O(2) in HBC cells, which in turn inhibits PP2A activity, leading to phosphorylation of ERK 1/2 and Akt and resulting in HBC cell proliferation.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of cyclosporin A on the continuous proliferation of Theileria parva-infected T cells was tested and compared with its effect on the Con A-induced proliferation of bovine lymph node cells. The effect of rIL-2 on cyclosporin A-treated cells was also tested. Whereas the Con A-induced proliferation of bovine lymph node cells was completely inhibited by cyclosporin A, the continuous growth of T. parva-infected cells was only partly inhibited. In both cases the inhibition was accompanied by a reduction in the level of IL-2R/Tac mRNA and surface IL-2R expression. The cyclosporin A-mediated inhibition of Con-A stimulated lymphoblasts was, over a period of 5 days, largely abrogated by human rIL-2. In the short term, rIL-2 could also alleviate the growth inhibition of T. parva-infected cells caused by treatment with cyclosporin A. In the long term, however, rIL-2 enhanced the cyclosporin A-mediated inhibition of T. parva-infected cells, gradually leading to their complete growth arrest. This enhanced inhibition was accompanied by a further reduction in surface IL-2R expression, but not by a further decrease in the levels of steady state IL-2R/Tac mRNA. The fact that IL-2 can enhance the inhibition caused by cyclosporin A could be of relevance for the immunosuppressive activity of cyclosporin A.  相似文献   

5.
Stimulation of T cells by the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex results in interleukin-2 (IL-2) synthesis and surface expression of the IL-2 receptor (IL-2R), which in turn drive T-cell proliferation. However, the significance of the requirement of IL-2 in driving T-cell proliferation, when TCR stimulation itself delivers potential mitogenic signals, is unclear. We show that blocking of IL-2 synthesis by Cyclosporin A (CsA) suppressed both the Concanavalin A (Con A)- and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)/ionomycin-induced proliferation of T cells. The latter is also inhibited by anti-IL-2R. Kinetic studies showed that T-cell proliferation begins to become resistant to CsA inhibition by about 12 h and became largely resistant by 18 h of stimulation. PMA, the protein kinase C activator, enhanced Con A-induced T-cell proliferation if added only within first 12 h of stimulation, and not after that. Given the fact that, in the present study, TCR is downregulated within 2 h of Con A stimulation and T cells entered the S phase of cell cycle by about 18 h of stimulation, the above results suggest that TCR stimulation provides the initial trigger to the resting T cells, which allows the cells to traverse the first two third portions of G1 phase of cell cycle and become proliferation competent. IL-2 action begins afterward, delivering the actual proliferation signal(s), allowing the cells to traverse the rest of G1 phase and enter the S phase of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

6.
Both hyperglycemia and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) were found to induce insulin resistance at the level of the insulin receptor (IR). How this effect is mediated is, however, not understood. We investigated whether oxidative stress and production of hydrogen peroxide could be a common mediator of the inhibitory effect. We report here that micromolar concentrations of H(2)O(2) dramatically inhibit insulin-induced IR tyrosine phosphorylation (pretreatment with 500 microM H(2)O(2) for 5 min inhibits insulin-induced IR tyrosine phosphorylation to 8%), insulin receptor substrate 1 phosphorylation, as well as insulin downstream signaling such as activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (inhibited to 57%), glucose transport (inhibited to 36%), and mitogen-activated protein kinase activation (inhibited to 7.2%). Both sodium orthovanadate, a selective inhibitor of tyrosine-specific phosphatases, as well as the protein kinase C inhibitor G?6976 reduced the inhibitory effect of hydrogen peroxide on IR tyrosine phosphorylation. To investigate whether H(2)O(2) is involved in hyperglycemia- and/or TNFalpha-induced insulin resistance, we preincubated the cells with the H(2)O(2) scavenger catalase prior to incubation with 25 mM glucose, 25 mM 2-deoxyglucose, 5.7 nM TNFalpha, or 500 microM H(2)O(2), respectively, and subsequent insulin stimulation. Whereas catalase treatment completely abolished the inhibitory effect of H(2)O(2) and TNFalpha on insulin receptor autophosphorylation, it did not reverse the inhibitory effect of hyperglycemia. In conclusion, these results demonstrate that hydrogen peroxide at low concentrations is a potent inhibitor of insulin signaling and may be involved in the development of insulin resistance in response to TNFalpha.  相似文献   

7.
Both amphotericin B (AmB) and its methyl ester derivative are potent immunoadjuvants that also stimulate murine B lymphocytes and macrophages in vitro. Most of the common inbred mouse strains show AmB-induced immunostimulation (AmB-high responders) but mice from the C57BL strains, regardless of H-2 genotype, are AmB-low responders. Lymphoid cells from AmB-high responder strains also exhibit greater resistance to H2O2 toxicity in vitro compared with cells from AmB-low responders. This result led to an evaluation of differences in the tissue catalase levels of AmB-high and -low responder strains. Results from several laboratories, including ours, indicate that C57BL mouse strains express low levels of tissue catalase activity in addition to low or absent immunostimulant effects of AmB. Several AmB-high responder strains have high spleen cell, macrophage, and liver catalase, and the mouse strain distribution of enzyme activity as well as the dominant inheritance of the low catalase phenotype is compatible with regulation by the Ce-1 locus in lymphoid organs as well as liver. Other evidence also suggests that H2O2 metabolism is important in lymphoid cell responses to AmB. For example, AmB stimulates a stronger respiratory burst in macrophages from AmB-high responder strains under the same conditions that inhibit burst activity in macrophages from low responders. Selective immune enhancement by AmB in high catalase mouse strains along with enhanced susceptibility to AmB toxicity in low responder C57BL mice with low tissue catalase activity suggests that cellular peroxidation is a major determinant of the genetic regulation of amphotericin-induced immunostimulation.  相似文献   

8.
The in vitro effects of 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME), macrophages (MØ), and concanavalin A (Con A) on the proliferation of normal spleen cells (NSC), MØ-depleted spleen cells (DSC), T cells, T-cell subpopulations, and B cells were assessed by [3H]thymidine incorporation. 2-ME alone was consistently shown not to be mitogenic for purified T cells; however, 2-ME enhanced the early (Days 1 and 2) Con A (2 μg/ml)-induced response of NSC, DSC, and T-cell preparations, but depressed the late response (Days 4 and 5). 2-ME alone was mitogenic for purified B-cells, as reported previously; and the 2-ME-induced B-cell response was inhibited by Con A. Preincubation of T cells with 2-ME was sufficient for enhanced Con A responsiveness; however, if 2-ME was added 24 hr after the initiation of culture, no alteration of the Con A-induced response was observed. Ly-2,3+ T cells were unresponsive to Con A (0.3–20 μg/ml), but the addition of 2-ME or peritoneal cells enhanced the Con A responsiveness of Ly-2,3+ T cells over 200-fold. Ly-1+ T cells responded with a similar doseresponse and kinetic profile as unselected T cells. Although Ly-1+ T cells responded to Con A, unlike Ly-2, 3+ T cells, extensive removal of MØ significantly reduced the Con A-induced responsiveness of the Ly-1+ T cells. The reactivities of Ly-1+ and Ly-2,3+ DSC could be reconstituted by the addition of MØ or 2-ME; however, the kinetic response of Ly-1+ T cells peaked on Day 2–3, and Ly-2,3+ T cells had a delayed response which peaked on Day 4–5. The results indicated that (i) 2-ME and/or MØ accelerate the response kinetics of T-cells to Con A; (ii) T-cell subpopulations have differential requirements for MØ and/or 2-ME in the response to Con A; (iii) T-cell subpopulations exhibit differential dose responsiveness to Con A; and (iiii) 2-ME alters Con A responsiveness by a direct effect on T cells.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Our previous studies have shown that 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) induces cellular hyperplasia/hypertrophy through protein tyrosine phosphorylation, rapid formation of superoxide (O(2)(-)), and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/ERK2 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation. Intracellularly released O(2)(-) is rapidly dismuted by superoxide dismutase (SOD) to H(2)O(2), another possible cellular growth mediator. In the present study, we assessed whether H(2)O(2) participates in 5-HT-induced mitogenic signaling. Inactivation of cellular Cu/Zn SOD by copper-chelating agents inhibited 5-HT-induced DNA synthesis of bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (BPASMCs). Infection of BPASMCs with an adenovirus containing catalase inhibited both ERK1/ERK2 MAP kinase activation and DNA synthesis induced by 5-HT. Although we could not find evidence of p38 MAP kinase activation by 5-HT, SB-203580 and SB-202190, reported inhibitors of p38 MAP kinase, inhibited the 5-HT-induced growth of BPASMCs. However, these inhibitors also inhibited 5-HT-induced O(2)(-) release. Thus quenching of O(2)(-) may be their mechanism for inhibition of cellular growth unrelated to p38 MAP kinase inhibition. These data indicate that generation of O(2)(-) in BPASMCs in response to 5-HT is followed by an increase in intracellular H(2)O(2) that mediates 5-HT-induced mitogenesis through activation of ERK1/ERK2 but not of p38 MAP kinase.  相似文献   

11.
To define the mechanism of arsenite-induced tumor promotion, we examined the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the signaling pathways of cells exposed to arsenite. Arsenite treatment resulted in the persistent activation of p70(s6k) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) which was accompanied by an increase in intracellular ROS production. The predominant produced appeared to be H(2)O(2), because the arsenite-induced increase in dichlorofluorescein (DCF) fluorescence was completely abolished by pretreatment with catalase but not with heat-inactivated catalase. Elimination of H(2)O(2) by catalase or N-acetyl-L-cysteine inhibited the arsenite-induced activation of p70(s6k) and ERK1/2, indicating the possible role of H(2)O(2) in the arsenite activation of the p70(s6k) and the ERK1/2 signaling pathways. A specific inhibitor of p70(s6k), rapamycin, and calcium chelators significantly blocked the activation of p70(s6k) induced by arsenite. While the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitors wortmannin and LY294002 completely abrogated arsenite activation of p70(s6k), ERK1/2 activation by arsenite was not affected by these inhibitors, indicating that H(2)O(2) might act as an upstream molecule of PI3K as well as ERK1/2. Consistent with these results, none of the inhibitors impaired H(2)O(2) production by arsenite. DNA binding activity of AP-1, downstream of ERK1/2, was also inhibited by catalase, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, and the MEK inhibitor PD98059, which significantly blocked arsenite activation of ERK1/2. Taken together, these studies provide insight into mechanisms of arsenite-induced tumor promotion and suggest that H(2)O(2) plays a critical role in tumor promotion by arsenite through activation of the ERK1/2 and p70(s6k) signaling pathways.  相似文献   

12.
The role of OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell subsets was studied in lectin-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (LDCC) against adherent HEp-2 human epipharynx carcinoma target cells. LDCC was evaluated by detachment from the monolayer of [3H]thymidine prelabeled HEp-2 cells in a 24-hr assay with a concanavalin A (Con A) dose of 25 microgram/ml at effector:target cell ratios of 5:1, 25:1, and 50:1. Under these conditions but without Con A considerable natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity (NCMC) was not elicited; however, the cytotoxicity was significantly augmented in the presence of Con A (=LDCC) by sheep erythrocyte rosette-forming T lymphocytes and by both OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell fractions. LDCC activity by isolated OKT8+ T cells was superior to that by OKT4+ T cells and unfractionated T lymphocytes. By contrast, addition of either OKT4+ or OKT8+ T cells together with unfractionated T lymphocytes, or OKT4+ and OKT8+ T cells mixed at ratios of 1:1, 1:2, and 2:1, to target cells did not result in major differences in comparison of LDCC activities by these mixed effector cell populations with each other or with that by unfractionated T lymphocytes. Parallel studies were carried out to determine the effect of OKT4+ and OKT8+ T-cell subsets on the Con A-induced proliferation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). While OKT8+ T cells inhibited the mitogenic response to Con A, OKT4+ T lymphocytes had no major effect. A higher responsiveness of the OKT8+ to OKT4+ T-cell subset in LDCC to HEp-2 targets and in Con A-induced lymphocyte proliferation is suggested.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of M-CSF-exposed macrophages on murine splenic lymphocyte responses was determined. Resident peritoneal macrophages incubated with purified M-CSF for 48 hr inhibited lymphocyte proliferation to Con A, PHA, and listerial antigen as determined by [3H]TdR uptake, and inhibited Con A-stimulated lymphocyte IL 2 production. The inhibition was similar to that observed with macrophages from BCG-infected mice. Maximal suppression occurred at M-CSF concentrations of 500 U/ml or greater and when the incubation time with M-CSF was 48 hr or more. M-CSF effect was specific because rabbit anti-M-CSF IgG blocked the suppression whereas control rabbit IgG did not. Secretory products of macrophages could not be implicated in this interaction. Catalase and indomethacin, alone or together, did not reverse the inhibition. In addition, putative suppressive factors were not detected in supernatants of M-CSF-stimulated macrophages. Lymphocytes that were removed from macrophage monolayers and were recultured in medium plus Con A were able to proliferate. Macrophages stimulated by M-CSF therefore appear to have inhibitory activity for proliferating lymphocytes, and may play a role in immunoregulatory mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) including hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) are generated constitutively in mammalian cells. Because of its relatively long life and high permeability across membranes, H(2)O(2) is thought to be an important second messenger. Generation of H(2)O(2) is increased in response to external insults, including radiation. Catalase is located at the peroxisome and scavenges H(2)O(2). In this study, we investigated the role of catalase in cell growth using the H(2)O(2)-resistant variant HP100-1 of human promyelocytic HL60 cells. HP100-1 cells had an almost 10-fold higher activity of catalase than HL60 cells without differences in levels of glutathione peroxidase, manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), and copper-zinc SOD (CuZnSOD). HP100-1 cells had higher proliferative activity than HL60 cells. Treatment with catalase or the introduction of catalase cDNA into HL60 cells stimulated cell growth. Exposure of HP100-1 cells to a catalase inhibitor resulted in suppression of cell growth with concomitant increased levels of intracellular H(2)O(2). Moreover, exogenously added H(2)O(2) or depletion of glutathione suppressed cell growth in HL60 cells. Extracellular signal regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) was constitutively phosphorylated in HP100-1 cells but not in HL60 cells. Inhibition of the ERK1/2 pathway suppressed the growth of HP100-1 cells, but inhibition of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38MAPK) did not affect growth. Moreover, inhibition of catalase blocked the phosphorylation of ERK1/2 but not of p38MAPK in HP100-1 cells. Thus our results suggest that catalase activates the growth of HL60 cells through dismutation of H(2)O(2), leading to activation of the ERK1/2 pathway; H(2)O(2) is an important regulator of growth in HL60 cells.  相似文献   

15.
The culture supernatants of Con A-activated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) contained at least two regulatory factors upon B cell proliferation. One was B cell growth factor (BCGF), which activated antigen-stimulated B cells to proliferation and clonal expansion, and the other was its inhibitory factor, arbitrarily named B cell growth inhibitory factor (BIF). This BIF inhibited the effect of BCGF on anti-mu-stimulated B cells or the monoclonal mature B cell line (CLL-T.H.) obtained from the peripheral blood lymphocytes of B cell-type chronic lymphocytic leukemia patients, which were activated only with BCGF and without adding other proliferating stimuli (e.g., anti-mu). BIF activity was detected in the 24 hr culture supernatants of Con A-activated human PBM in FCS containing medium and also in serum-free RPMI 1640 medium. This substance with BIF activity could not be derived from FCS. Con A-induced BIF (m.w. of 80,000 and an isoelectric point of pH 5.4) was analyzed by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration and chromatofocusing. BIF was stable at pH 2.0 and at 56 degrees C for 30 min. Partially purified BIF had no effect on cell viability and almost no interferon activity (less than 1 IU/ml). BIF with high titer had a slight but significant inhibition on TCGF-dependent T cell growth and on PHA or Con A responses, but the extent of these inhibitions was far less than that of BCGF-dependent B cell growth. Absorption of BIF with Con A blasts made its inhibition on T cell growth even less. On the other hand, BIF activity could not be absorbed with Con A blasts but was almost absorbed with large numbers of CLL-T.H. cells. BIF had almost no inhibitory effect on the proliferation of a mouse fibroblast cell line (NIH 3T3), a mouse myeloma cell line (NS-1), human lymphoid cell lines (MOLT-4, HSB-2, and Daudi), or a human myeloid cell line (K-562). BIF-producing cells were estimated to be T cells and were identified as T8+ T cells. On the other hand, Con A-induced BCGF was demonstrated to be produced predominantly by T4+ T cells. These results show that human B cell proliferation is regulated by interaction between T4+ and T8+ cells via soluble factors, namely BCGF and BIF, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Chemical oxidation or reduction of lymphocyte cell surface thiol or disulfide groups, respectively, has been shown to alter the proliferative activity of murine T cells. S-2-(3-aminopropylamino)ethylphosphothioic acid, a compound containing no free thiol group until it is intracellularly dephosphorylated, did not enhance Con A-induced proliferation which suggested that thiols did not mediate proliferative enhancement via an intracellular mechanism. Glutathione, an impermeant thiol, enhanced T-cell proliferation 68% as effectively as 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME), which suggested that the thiol-sensitive site was at the cell surface. A battery of structural analogs to 2-ME was employed to elucidate the chemical requirements for the biological activity of the thiols. The necessity for a hydrogen-binding moiety on the thiol reagent was determined by the use of non-hydrogen-binding analogs and by competitive inhibition of the thiol-enhancing activity of 2-ME by non-thiol-containing hydrogen-binding analogs. Pretreatment of cells with the copper:phenanthroline complex (CuP), an impermeant oxidant of thiol groups, reduced the Con A-induced response >79%; however, the presence of 2-ME in culture completely reversed the inhibitory effect of CuP pretreatment. Oxidation of T cells by high oxygen tension (17% O2) also ablated the Con A response but did not alter the response to Con A + 2-ME. Protection from oxidative inhibition also was afforded T cells by sequential reduction and blockage of cell surface thiol groups. Finally, a model which correlates the chemical study of cell surface residues with T-lymphocyte responsiveness is presented.  相似文献   

17.
The requirements for inducing Lyt-2+ T cell proliferation in response to concanavalin A (Con A) were examined. Purified Lyt-2+ or L3T4+ spleen cells of C57BL/6 origin were stimulated with Con A and syngeneic macrophages (MO) in the presence of monoclonal antibodies to T cell markers or to polymorphic determinants on major histocompatibility complex molecules, and assessed for the ability to proliferate and to produce interleukin (IL) 2. alpha I-Ab failed to inhibit the Con A response of Lyt-2+ cells at dilutions that significantly inhibited the response of L3T4+ cells. In contrast, alphaKb/Db or alpha Lyt-2.2 specifically inhibited the response of Lyt-2+ cells, but not L3T4+ cells. The ability of alpha Kb/Db and of alpha Lyt-2.2 to inhibit the response of Lyt-2+ cells was dependent upon the concentration of Con A. These data demonstrate that optimal triggering of T cell subsets to proliferate and to produce IL-2 in response to Con A requires interactions with the appropriate restricting major histocompatibility complex molecule. The role of accessory cells in Lyt-2+ Con A-induced proliferation and IL-2 production was also investigated. Purified Lyt-2+ cells and purified L3T4+ cells failed to respond to Con A in the absence of MO. IL-1 reconstituted the response when MO were limiting, but failed to restore the response of either Lyt-2+ or L3T4+ cells when T cells were rigorously purified to remove all MO. These results demonstrate that triggering Lyt-2+ T cells, like L3T4+ T cells, requires accessory cells, and that this does not merely reflect a requirement for IL-1 production. Thus, Con A-induced proliferation and IL-2 production by Lyt-2+ T cells requires intimate contact with accessory cells and interactions dependent upon the class I-restricting element.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism by which purinergic agonists modulate murine T-lymphocyte activation and proliferation was investigated. Adenosine and other compounds such as ATP and 2-chloroadenosine (ClAdo) were found to block T-cell mitogenesis induced by concanavalin A (Con A) in a dose-dependent fashion. The nonmetabolizable adenosine analog ClAdo was the most potent agent capable of inhibiting T-cell mitogenesis. Extracellular addition of the permeable cAMP analog dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) also led to a dose-dependent blockade of T-cell mitogenesis, although with less efficiency when compared to ClAdo. Addition of IL-2-enriched fluids failed to reverse blockade of T-cell mitogenesis by ClAdo or dbcAMP. ClAdo blocked T-cell enlargement induced after 20 hr of culture with Con A. We analyzed the effect of micromolar concentrations of ClAdo on interleukin-2 (IL-2) production, expression of IL-2 receptors (7D4 and 3C7 surface antigens), and induction of IL-2 responsiveness after in vitro cultivation with Con A. ClAdo inhibited both IL-2 secretion and induction of IL-2 responsiveness up to control levels in the same dose range it inhibited T-cell mitogenesis. However, cell surface expression of IL-2 receptors was not affected. Short incubations of resting splenic T cells with ClAdo led to a dose-dependent accumulation of cyclic AMP in responding cells. This effect was markedly reduced by the purinergic antagonist 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) but was not prevented by the adenosine uptake blocker dipyridamole. ClAdo elicited cAMP accumulation in the same dose range it inhibited T-cell activation events. Extracellular administration of dbcAMP to splenic T cells stimulated by Con A mimicked the effects of ClAdo on T-cell activation parameters, as revealed by a dose-dependent blockade of both IL-2 secretion and IL-2 responsiveness induction, without affecting IL-2 receptor expression. Short incubations of Con A-activated T-cell blasts with ClAdo also led to a dose-dependent accumulation of cAMP. We then analyzed the effect of purines and dbcAMP on IL-2-mediated activated T-cell growth. Purines caused a dose-dependent inhibition of IL-2-mediated T-cell proliferation and ClAdo was the most potent purinergic agonist tested. The effect of ClAdo on Con A-induced T blasts was shifted to the right, if compared to earlier T-cell activation steps.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) can interact with intracellular signaling pathways to regulate cell behavior. The c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1) signal, involved in diverse aspects of cellular functioning, is implicated as a cell sensor of redox stress. The growth-inhibitory effect of both high-level H(2)O(2) and H(2)O(2)-scavenging catalase treatments is accompanied by increased JNK1 activity. To investigate the role of this response in growth regulation, the JNK1 signal was increased by the introduction of ectopic HA-JNK1. HA-JNK1 expression correlated with increases in basal c-Jun phosphorylation in a dose-dependent manner. Transient expression of HA-JNK1 potentiated cell growth arrest by catalase; however, with stable expression a degree of resistance to this response was observed. Resistance was accompanied by a lowered endogenous production of H(2)O(2). Transient HA-JNK1 expression also reduced H(2)O(2) generation, and this effect was reversed by the JNK inhibitor SP600125. These results indicate that the JNK1 stress response contributes to growth inhibition by catalase treatment via inhibition of cellular H(2)O(2) production. Stable amplification of the JNK1 pathway leads to cellular adaptation to its signal, resulting in a diminished reliance upon H(2)O(2) for efficient growth.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of hyperlipaemic serum on mitogen-induced T lymphocyte proliferation was investigated with cynomolgus monkeys. The mitogen-induced blastogenesis was remarkably inhibited when either hyperlipaemic or normal monkey lymphocytes were incubated with hyperlipaemic sera. Hyperlipaemic serum also inhibited ConA-induced interleukin 2 (IL-2) production as well as IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) expression of normal monkey lymphocytes. On the other hand, it showed slight inhibition of T-cell proliferation induced by adding recombinant human IL-2 to IL-2R-positive normal monkey lymphocytes. These results indicate that hyperlipaemic serum inhibited an early stage of T-cell autocrine activation pathway including IL-2 production and IL-2R expression.  相似文献   

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