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1.
When L3T4+ cloned murine helper T lymphocytes (HTL) are stimulated with antigen or immobilized anti-T cell receptor (TCR) monoclonal antibodies (mAb) at concentrations which are optimal for proliferation, anti-L3T4 mAb inhibits activation as measured by proliferation and lymphokine production. Under similar conditions, IL 2-independent proliferation of Lyt-2+ cloned murine cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) stimulated by anti-TCR mAb is inhibited by anti-Lyt-2 antibodies. Proliferation of cloned HTL and CTL cells stimulated by IL 2 is not affected by the anti-L3T4 and anti-Lyt-2 mAb. The inhibition of TCR-induced activation of the T cell clones is not due to interference with the binding of the anti-TCR mAb. Stimulation of the TCR has been proposed to induce lymphokine secretion and proliferation by T cells through a pathway involving the activation of protein kinase C and the stimulation of an increase in the concentration of intracellular free calcium. However, proliferation of T cells stimulated by PMA (which activates protein kinase C) plus the calcium ionophore A23187 (which increases the concentration of intracellular free calcium) is not affected by mAb reactive with the Lyt-2 or L3T4 structures. If TCR stimulation does indeed activate T cells by activating protein kinase and increasing intracellular free calcium, then our data suggest that anti-L3T4 and anti-Lyt-2 mAb inhibit TCR-driven proliferation at some step before the activation of protein kinase C and the stimulation of a rise in intracellular free calcium concentration. Our results suggest that anti-L3T4 and anti-Lyt-2 mAb interfere with early biochemical processes induced by stimulation of the TCR. In HTL, which proliferate via an autocrine pathway, anti-L3T4 mAb appears to inhibit proliferation by interfering with signaling events involved in lymphokine production. Inhibition of IL 2-independent proliferation of Lyt-2+ cells by anti-Lyt-2 mAb appears to occur by a different mechanism. The precise molecular basis for the interference of each cell type has not yet been characterized.  相似文献   

2.
The Ta1 (CDw26) Ag distinguishes a subset of circulating T lymphocytes that is the major population proliferating to recall Ag challenge. Unlike receptors for growth factors such as IL-2 and transferrin, the Ta1 Ag is present on T cell lines and clones irrespective of cell cycle. The appearance of Ta1 on T cells that respond to recall Ag allowed us to investigate activation requirements that may be associated with T cell immune memory. Ta1+ peripheral blood T cells were induced to proliferate by mAb recognizing either the invariant chains of the TCR, or by pairs of mitogenic antibodies directed to the CD2 molecule. In contrast, Ta1- cells were not stimulated by these antibodies. In addition, Ta1-cells did not proliferate maximally after addition of the phorbol ester PMA in combination with the calcium ionophore Ionomycin, suggesting that the intracellular targets of these agents may not be fully active. Anti-CD3-induced elevation of intracellular calcium levels was equivalent in the two subpopulations, suggesting that calcium mobilization mechanisms were intact. In contrast, PMA-induced phosphorylation of TCR CD3 chains was significantly greater in Ta1+ cells as compared to Ta1- T cells. Taken together, our results indicate that Ta1 expression, which is associated with T cell activation and memory, may be causally related to TCR and CD2-mediated activation mechanisms. The PMA inducible TCR phosphorylation in Ta1+ memory cells associated with their increased ability to proliferate after CD3/TCR or CD2 stimulation suggests that intracellular phosphorylation events may be causally associated with T cell immune memory.  相似文献   

3.
Resting T lymphocytes proliferate in response to a combination of a calcium ionophore and a phorbol ester. This observation suggests that an increase in intracellular calcium free ion concentration [Ca2+]i and activation of protein kinase C (PKC) are sufficient signaling events for the initiation of T cell proliferation. In contrast, an accessory cell-generated costimulatory signal, acting independently of the rise in [Ca2+]i and PKC activation, is required for Ag-induced proliferation of type I T cell clones. We now report that this costimulatory signal is unexpectedly also being delivered via a cell-cell interaction during the response to ionomycin and phorbol ester. In the absence of this signal (at limiting cell numbers), T cells fail to divide. We also demonstrate that proliferation in response to immobilized anti-CD3 mAb requires the cell-cell interaction. These results suggest a model of T cell stimulation in which activation of a costimulatory signaling pathway is important in the regulation of the IL-2 gene, and only in the presence of this (third) signal can an increase in [Ca2+]i and PKC activity induce T cell proliferation. Such a model predicts that IL-2-dependent expansion of T cell clones in vivo in response to Ag receptor occupancy requires the delivery of an independent accessory cell-derived co-stimulatory signal.  相似文献   

4.
Most mature human T lymphocytes express both the multichain T3 (CD3)/Ti T cell receptor for antigen (TCR), and the biochemically distinct 55-kDa T11 (CD2) glycoprotein. Stimulating the T11 molecule causes profound T cell proliferation and functional activation in vitro, but the relationship of T11-mediated activation to antigenic stimulation of T lymphocytes in vivo remains unknown. We now present evidence that T11 function is directly linked to TCR components in T3/Ti+ T11+ human T cells. First, we found that stimulating peripheral blood T cells with the mitogenic combination of anti-T11(2) cells with the mitogenic combination of anti-T11(2) plus anti-T11(3) monoclonal antibodies caused the phosphorylation of TCR T3 chains. The predominance of T3-gamma-phosphorylation that occurred in anti-T11(2) plus anti-T11(3)-treated T cells is similar to the pattern previously observed in antigen-stimulated T cell clones. Second, T11 function depended upon concurrent cell-surface expression of the TCR. Thus, when peripheral blood T cells were deprived of cell surface T3/Ti by anti-T3 modulation, anti-T11(2) plus anti-T11(3)-induced mitogenesis and transmembrane signal generation in the form of calcium mobilization were inhibited. The mechanism of TCR-T11 interdependence was investigated in a series of TCR-deficient variants of a T cell lymphoblastoid cell line. T3/Ti negative variants expressed cell surface T11, but anti-T11(2) plus anti-T11(3) failed to cause detectable calcium mobilization. The TCR-deficient variants also failed to express T11(3) activation epitopes after incubation with anti-T11(2) antibodies, suggesting that T11(3) expression is an essential and TCR-dependent intermediate in the T11 activation mechanism in these cells. Taken together, our results suggest that T11 function depends upon cell-surface expression of TCR in many T3/Ti+ T11+ T lymphocytes, and T11-mediated activation is intimately interconnected with TCR activation mechanisms. A model in which stimulating signals delivered via T11 may be a part of antigenic activation of T lymphocytes is presented.  相似文献   

5.
The activation requirements of alloreactive and antigen reactive murine T cells were examined by stimulating class II restricted T cell clones with monoclonal B lymphoma cells. One B lymphoma cell line (T27A) was found to stimulate IL 2 release from some alloreactive T cell clones without stimulating any significant T cell proliferation response. The same B lymphoma cells are capable of stimulating IL 2 release and proliferative responses from other T cell clones. Evidence is presented suggesting that B lymphoma cell stimulation of these T cell clones is largely IL 1 independent and that at least some T cell clones may require activation signals other than Ia, antigen, and IL 1. The addition of exogenous, purified IL 1 to the T cell activation assays was found to have a wide range of stimulatory effects on the proliferative responses of different T cell clones. The absence of comparable IL 1-induced stimulation of IL 2 secretion suggests that IL 1 primarily enhances antigen specific T cell proliferation through mechanisms other than acting as a co-stimulant for IL 2 release.  相似文献   

6.
The antigen-like activity of monoclonal antibodies directed at the T3-Ti antigen receptor complex of human T lymphocytes was employed to study activation requirements of resting T cells. Efficient antigen recognition (signal 1) by T lymphocytes requires multimeric antigen receptor triggering because under appropriate experimental conditions soluble ligands do not produce this initial signal for T cell activation. The latter leads to receptiveness for both interleukin 1 (IL 1) and interleukin 2 (IL 2). Importantly, induction of proliferation requires an additional signal (signal 2), namely IL 1, which appears to be required to enable optimal secretion of IL 2. In contrast, presensitized T lymphocytes do not require IL 1 for IL 2 production. In this case, antigen receptor oligomerization is in itself sufficient to induce IL 2 receptor expression, and IL 2 secretion as well.  相似文献   

7.
The requirements for activation of human peripheral blood T cells by the mitogenic monoclonal antibody OKT3 were examined. OKT3 binds to a T cell molecule, T3, associated with the T cell antigen receptor and involved in T cell activation. Activation of T cells by OKT3 requires signals provided by accessory cells and is IL 2 dependent. In the presence of accessory cells, OKT3 induces loss of T3 molecules from the cell surface, production of IL 2, expression of IL 2 receptors, and proliferation. Modulation of T3 molecules by OKT3 can be induced in the absence of accessory cells with anti-mouse IgG. These T cells, however, are not induced to express IL 2 receptors or secrete IL 2. The addition of IL 1 induces expression of IL 2 receptors, but does not induce IL 2 secretion or proliferation. Thus, peripheral blood T cells appear to have different requirements for activation compared with antigen-specific T cell clones that can be induced to produce IL 2 when stimulated with OKT3 and IL 1. Expression of IL 2 receptors does not require modulation of T3 molecules, because the binding of OKT3 to T cells in the presence of IL 1 alone is sufficient to induce IL 2 receptor expression. The results suggest that IL 2 secretion depends on cross-linking and modulation of T3 molecules, and additional, as yet undefined, accessory cell signals. The expression of IL 2 receptors and proliferation of T cells can be induced in the absence of these signals when exogenous IL 2 is provided.  相似文献   

8.
Ryanodine receptors (RyR) are involved in regulating intracellular Ca(++) mobilization in T lymphocytes. However, the importance of RyR signaling during T cell activation has not yet been determined. In this study, we have used the RyR-selective antagonists, ruthenium red and dantrolene, to determine the effect of RyR blockade on T cell receptor-mediated activation events and cytokine-dependent T cell proliferation. Both ruthenium red and dantrolene inhibited DNA synthesis and cell division, as well as the synthesis of interleukin (IL)-2 by T lymphocytes responding to mitogenic anti-CD3 antibody. Blockade of RyR at initiation of culture or as late as 24 h after T cell receptor stimulation inhibited T cell proliferation, suggesting a requirement for sustained RyR signaling during cell cycle progression. Although flow cytometry revealed that RyR blockade had little effect on activation-induced expression of the alpha chain (CD25) of the high affinity IL-2 receptor, the inhibitory effect of RyR antagonists could not be reversed by the addition of exogenous IL-2 at initiation of culture. In addition, both ruthenium red and dantrolene had a strong inhibitory effect on IL-2-dependent proliferation of CTLL-2 T cells. These data indicate that RyR are involved in regulating IL-2 receptor signaling that drives T cell progression through the cell cycle. We conclude that RyR-associated Ca(++) signaling regulates T cell proliferation by promoting both IL-2 synthesis and IL-2-dependent cell cycle progression.  相似文献   

9.
Experiments were performed to assess the capacity of lectin (Con A), ionomycin, phorbol ester (PMA), and recombinant IL 2 to mediate proliferation as well as the expression of cell surface IL 2 receptors, two lymphokine genes, IL 2 and IFN-gamma, and the c-myc proto-oncogene in cloned T cell populations. Stimulation of T cell clones with recombinant IL 2 resulted in proliferation and sustained expression of the c-myc cellular proto-oncogene, but did not induce the expression of mRNA for the lymphokines IFN-gamma and IL 2. In contrast, stimulation of cloned T cells with lectin alone induced significant IFN-gamma and IL 2 mRNA expression, up-regulation of the number of cell surface IL 2 receptors, and transient c-myc expression. Ionomycin alone was not a sufficient signal for lymphokine mRNA induction. The phorbol ester PMA alone induced neither proliferation nor lymphokine gene expression but potentiated lectin and ionomycin-mediated signals. We also performed experiments to examine whether the T cell response to extracellular stimuli was a function of the activation state of the cell. Reexposure of 48-hr antigen-activated cloned cells to identical stimuli revealed several differences. Low but significant levels of IFN-gamma mRNA were now also reinduced in activated clones cells in response to IL 2 or PMA alone. Activated cells were refractory to reinduction of IL 2 mRNA by any stimulus, which may reflect a physiologic mechanism to limit clonal expansion after antigenic stimulation. This could be partially reversed by restimulation with lectin in the presence of cycloheximide, suggesting a role for a labile protein repressor in the down-regulation of IL 2 mRNA expression. PMA alone induced an IL 2-independent proliferative response. We demonstrate that distinct signals are required for lymphokine gene expression vs cellular proliferation in cloned T lymphocyte populations, and that the capacity of extracellular stimuli to reinduce expression of lymphokine genes or to mediate cell proliferation is altered by prior activation.  相似文献   

10.
The role that extracellular calcium plays in activating resting cloned cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) to proliferate and to produce lymphokines was examined. In these cells, stimulation with interleukin 2 (IL-2) induced a proliferative response without a concomitant production of macrophage-activating factor (MAF), whereas stimulation with antigen or lectin (in the absence of IL-2) induced MAF production but not proliferation. In the case of IL-2-induced proliferation, extracellular calcium was required to initiate proliferation as well as to prevent cellular arrest later in the G2 + M phase of the cell cycle. In MAF production extracellular calcium was required both to activate the phosphatidylinositol signal-transducing mechanism and to mobilize intracellular calcium in antigen- or lectin-stimulated cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Further, extracellular calcium was required for only 8 of the 18 hr of stimulation time which was needed to achieve maximal MAF production, indicating that both calcium-dependent and -independent events exist in the signal pathway. Additional experiments with calcium ionophores and activators of protein kinase C indicated that although both intracellular calcium mobilization and de novo protein phosphorylation are involved in MAF production, an optimal increase in the level of intracellular calcium by itself is insufficient to induce the production of this lymphokine.  相似文献   

11.
It is well-established that activated T cells proliferate in response to interleukin 2 (IL 2) and produce various soluble lymphokines such as macrophage-activating factor (MAF) in response to antigen. Prior to investigating the molecular events involved in signaling the initiation of these responses in cloned murine cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), we determined whether these responses could occur independently, and we established for each response the time during which signal transducing mechanisms may function. It was found that this cloned CTL population was in a resting state (G1 phase of cell cycle) 7 days after stimulation with antigen plus IL 2. At this time, the incubation of these resting CTL with IL 2 for 4 to 6 hr resulted in a maximal proliferative response that was not accompanied by the production of MAF. Conversely, the incubation of resting CTL with antigen or lectin (in the absence of IL 2) for at least 8 hr resulted in the maximal production of MAF at 24 hr without inducing a proliferative response. In addition, antigen or lectin, but not IL 2, triggered an immediate (less than 1 min) and sustained (at least 8 hr) mobilization of intracellular calcium. The kinetics of this calcium response paralleled the minimum time (8 hr) that was required for resting CTL to interact with either antigen or lectin in order to produce maximal titers of MAF. These results indicate that proliferation and lymphokine (MAF) production in cloned murine CTL are independent events. In these resting CTL, the signal mechanisms that mediate the production of lymphokines are most likely restricted to the initial 8 hr of stimulation by antigen or lectin and involve the rapid and prolonged mobilization of cytoplasmic calcium. Proliferative signals, however, are probably complete within 4 to 6 hr after stimulation by IL 2 and do not involve readily demonstrable fluxes of cytoplasmic calcium, as determined by the fluorescent calcium probe Quin 2.  相似文献   

12.
We have directly compared the signals required for: induction of the [Ca+2]i response, expression of Tac antigen, and proliferation in antigen-specific human T cell clones. We have previously shown that antigen-specific activation of cloned T cells under conditions leading to proliferation is accompanied by a rapid increase in [Ca+2]i. Cloned T cells showed increased [Ca+2]i, enhanced Tac expression, and proliferated in response to specific antigen in the presence of viable, genetically appropriate antigen-presenting cells. Paraformaldehyde fixation of antigen-presenting cells after "pulsing" with antigen prevented proliferation, but did not affect MHC-restricted [Ca+2]i or Tac responses. Treatment of cloned T cells with monoclonal anti-T3 antibody also increased [Ca+2]i and Tac expression but did not induce proliferation. Proliferation was restored by viable autologous or allogenic APC or exogenous IL 2, but not by IL 1. In contrast to resting T cells, T cell clones were insensitive to the mitogenic effects of lectins or of ionophores and phorbol esters. These results suggest that activation of antigen-specific T cells requires the sequential action of at least two signals. The first is MHC restricted and is mediated by interaction of antigen + MHC class II products with the T cell receptor (T3-Ti) complex. This leads to Tac expression and increased [Ca+2]i, but is not sufficient for proliferation. This signal can be bypassed by anti-T3 monoclonal antibodies. Proliferation requires a second, nonantigen-specific, non-MHC-restricted antigen-presenting cell signal, which cannot be replaced by IL 1 in our system. This signal can be bypassed, however, by the addition of exogenous IL 2 to cells that have received the first signal and express Tac, suggesting that it is required for IL 2 synthesis and secretion. T cell clones therefore provide a useful model for studying antigen-dependent and -independent events in cell activation.  相似文献   

13.
Although considerable data have recently been accumulated regarding the functional role of natural killer (NK) cells, relatively little is known about the factors that regulate NK cell activity. In these studies, we evaluated the role of interleukin 2 (IL 2) and the expression of the IL 2 receptor in the activation and proliferation of human NK cloned cell lines. By using a series of cloned cell lines, we were able to analyze homogeneous populations of NK cells that ordinarily comprise only a small fraction of peripheral blood lymphocytes and are extremely heterogeneous with respect to phenotypes and cytotoxic specificities. In comparison with several T cell clones, we found a much lower density of IL 2 receptors on NK clones, regardless of whether or not these cloned cells had a mature T cell phenotype. Correspondingly, NK clones needed a 10-fold higher concentration of recombinant IL 2 for maximal proliferation. Moreover, blocking studies with specific monoclonal IL 2 receptor antibodies indicated that IL 2 is both necessary and sufficient to induce the proliferation of NK clones. Because the majority of peripheral blood NK cells and NK clones express the T11 E rosette receptor antigen, which has been shown to be an antigen-independent activation pathway for T cells, we were able to study the role of monoclonal anti-T11 antibodies in the activation of various NK clones for which a specific target antigen is not known. In contrast to T cell clones, the induction of IL 2 receptor expression after T11 activation was possible only for some NK clones such as JT10 and JT3, but not for CNK5. Before activation, the IL 2 receptor expression of NK clones was confined to cells in the G2 - M phase, but after T11 activation the more pronounced IL 2 receptor expression became independent of the cell cycle. With respect to the direct proliferative effect of anti-T11 activation that has been noted with T cell clones, only the T3+ (JT10) and not the T3- NK clones could be directly stimulated. Nevertheless, IL 2 receptor expression could be triggered on some T3- clones such as JT3. Because T11-induced proliferation of T cells has been shown to be dependent on both the expression of the IL 2 receptor and on the interaction of this receptor with IL 2, it is proposed that the different responses of NK cells to T11 activation may reflect the ability of the individual clone to produce endogenous IL 2, as well as its ability to express the IL 2 receptor.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
The interference of T cell activation by calcium channel blocking agents   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Calcium has been identified as having an important role as a transmembrane messenger in the activation signal for lymphocytes. To additionally examine this model, we evaluated the effect of calcium channel blocking drugs (verapamil, nifedipine, and diltiazem) on lymphocyte activation. In these studies we found that the drugs inhibit, in a dose-dependent fashion, the proliferation of T cells and the appearance of certain activation antigens after mitogen stimulation. This appears to result from the marked decrease in mitogen-induced 45calcium (45Ca+2) influx secondary to the addition of these agents. In addition, T cell proliferation resulting from IL 2 binding to its receptor is also suppressed by the calcium channel blocking drugs. These data suggest that the passive calcium channel plays a pivotal role in both the initial activation of T cells after ligand-receptor interaction and the ongoing signal for proliferation provided by IL 2 binding to its receptor.  相似文献   

17.
The release of immune or gamma interferon (IFN-gamma) by major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-restricted pigeon cytochrome c-specific Lyt 1+2-, interleukin 2 (IL 2)-producing proliferative T cell clones when cultured with antigen and antigen-presenting cells (APC) is a sensitive measure of the state of activation of the cell. In general, the fine specificity of T cell activation was similar when activation was measured either by IFN-gamma production or by proliferation. In response to antigen and the correct Ia molecule, the T cell clones produced both high titered IFN-gamma and a strong proliferative response. However, IFN-gamma production and the degree of proliferation of the T cell clones differed at high antigen concentrations. As antigen concentration increased, the magnitude of proliferation became submaximal whereas the IFN-gamma response became maximal suggesting that IFN-gamma produced by the cells might act as an autoregulatory molecule inhibiting the proliferative response. Stimulating the T cell to divide via its IL 2 receptor by adding exogenous IL 2 produced high levels of proliferation but only low titers of IFN-gamma activity. In addition, irradiation of the clone eliminated the IFN-gamma release induced by IL 2 but did not affect the IFN-gamma release induced by antigen and Ia. Thus proliferation is not essential for IFN-gamma production and unlike antigen and Ia, IL 2 functions predominantly as a proliferative signal and not as a signal for factor release. Two T cell clones showed a dissociation of IFN-gamma production and proliferation. In one case, a clone that proliferated in response to both allogeneic and antigenic stimuli released IFN-gamma in response to antigen but failed to produce IFN-gamma in response to the allogeneic stimulus. A second clone that showed a strong proliferative response to pigeon cytochrome c but no proliferative response to a species variant of cytochrome c, tobacco hornworm moth (THWM) cytochrome c, produced IFN-gamma when stimulated with either of these antigens. Thus, the sensitivity of detecting activation of T cell clones as measured by the release of an individual lymphokine varies from one clone to another.  相似文献   

18.
The role of the accessory cell in optimizing T cell proliferative responses to mitogens is a well known but poorly understood phenomenon. To further dissect the function of the accessory cell in allowing T cell proliferation, we compared mitogen-induced c-myc, interleukin 2 (IL 2), and IL 2 receptor gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and in T cells rigorously depleted of accessory cells through differential adherence and anti-Dr (anti-class II major histocompatibility antigen) monoclonal antibody complement-directed cytotoxicity. In cultures stimulated with phytohemagglutinin (PHA), a mitogen that requires accessory cells to induce T cell proliferation, expression of all measured genes was accessory cell dependent, since accumulation of their mRNA in PBMC was greater than that in cultures depleted of accessory cells. These genes varied in their accessory cell dependence, with IL 2 expression most dependent, c-myc expression least dependent, and IL 2 receptor expression intermediate in dependency. Use of 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) or ionomycin, mitogens that stimulate T cell proliferation independent of accessory cells, induced equal levels of gene expression in PBMC and in T cells depleted of accessory cells. These results suggest that PHA-stimulated T cells are dependent on an accessory cell signal(s) for optimal expression of the genes for c-myc, IL 2, and IL 2 receptor, and for proliferation. In addition, this signal(s) appears to be delivered early in the course of T cell activation events, since it can be bypassed by mitogens that directly activate protein kinase C (TPA) or induce calcium translocation (ionomycin). In addition, these data provide further evidence that expression of the c-myc protooncogene is insufficient for T cell mitogenesis, since PHA-induced accumulation of c-myc mRNA was only partially accessory cell dependent, whereas proliferation was completely accessory-cell dependent.  相似文献   

19.
T cell growth without serum   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Most in vitro T cell proliferation experiments are performed by using serum-supplemented medium, yet the actual contributions of serum components to cell cycle progression remain ill-defined, thus complicating attempts to fully define requirements for cell division. By utilizing a functional separation between T cell receptor-triggered "competence" and IL 2-promoted "progression" to independently assess serum requirements during each cell cycle stage, it was shown that serum serves an essential, active role only during the early events of the competence phase (G0-G1 transition) of T cell activation. Serum is required for optimal IL 2 production and the cell surface expression of IL 2 receptors after the stimulation of the T3/Ti antigen receptor complex. In contrast, serum does not function actively during IL 2-mediated progression through the G1 phase of the cycle. Serum proteins serve only a passive role at this stage, preventing the adsorption of IL 2. This same effect can be provided by any number of proteins including IL 2 itself, or even a high cell concentration. Supplementation of serum-free T cell cultures solely with IL 2 and transferrin is sufficient for maximal T cell proliferation, although the time of the peak response is delayed owing to a suboptimal rate of IL 2 receptor expression. Accordingly, the realization that serum is only necessary for the earliest stage of T cell activation will now enable studies designed to identify the critical individual serum components and to define their mechanism of action.  相似文献   

20.
The mechanism by which prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) inhibits human T lymphocyte activation and proliferation was studied. We analyzed the effect of physiologic concentrations of PGE2 on interleukin 2 (IL 2) production, expression of IL 2 receptor (Tac antigen), and expression of the transferrin receptor after in vitro activation with phytohemagglutinin. PGE2 inhibited T lymphocyte proliferation by 80 to 90% of control values. This was associated with a similar degree of inhibition of IL 2 production while the expression of IL 2 receptor was not affected. This was in marked contrast to the expression of the transferrin receptor, which was inhibited 65% after 72 hr of in vitro activation. The addition of exogenous, purified IL 2 reconstituted lymphocyte proliferation to 50% of control values, but had no effect on transferrin receptor expression. Because PGE2 is known to increase the intracellular concentration of 3',5' cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), we investigated the effect of another adenylate cyclase activator, i.e., isoproterenol, as well as the effect of extracellular administration of the cAMP derivative dibutyryl cAMP (dBcAMP) on IL 2 production, Tac antigen expression, and transferrin receptor expression. It was demonstrated that isoproterenol, as well as dBcAMP, inhibited transferrin receptor expression on PHA-activated T lymphocytes to the same extent as PGE2, and exogenous IL 2 could not counteract the down-regulation of the receptor expression. In contrast, neither isoproterenol nor dBcAMP had any significant effect on IL 2 receptor expression. Prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), which has been reported to elevate intracellular cyclic GMP levels, had no effect on lymphocyte activation and proliferation, and did not counteract the PGE2-induced depression in IL 2 production. In contrast to its effect on peripheral blood lymphocytes, PGE2 had no effect on transferrin receptor expression or cell proliferation by IL 2-dependent T cell clones and IL 2-independent T cell lines. These studies demonstrate that PGE2 exerts its inhibitory effects on T cell activation and proliferation via two distinct pathways: inhibition of IL 2 production and inhibition of transferrin receptor expression. The transferrin receptor inhibition is mediated via the cAMP pathway and is IL 2-independent.  相似文献   

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