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The human T cell leukemia Jurkat was used as a model to examine the requirements of T cell activation. These studies demonstrated that antibodies reactive with the T cell-specific T3 antigen were insufficient to result in the activation of Jurkat cells, determined by the secretion of IL 2. IL 2 production occurred only in the presence of a second stimulus, the phorbol ester PMA. With the use of an IL 2-specific cDNA probe, the appearance of IL 2 RNA, similarly, occurred only when cells were stimulated with both anti-T3 antibodies and PMA. These results demonstrate a two-stimulus requirement for gene expression in human T cells.  相似文献   

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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   

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Regulation of interleukin 2 synthesis by cAMP in human T cells   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
T cell activation requires two initial signals that first lead to the expression of interleukin 2 (IL 2) receptors and the initiation of IL 2 synthesis and then to T cell proliferation. Jurkat T lymphoma cells have been shown to be a good model for studying IL 2 synthesis because these cells also require two signals for activation. The first signal can be provided by the lectin phytohaemagglutinin (PHA), and the second one by the phorbol ester, 12-o-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA). The regulation of IL 2 synthesis in Jurkat cells, however, is unclear, and the present study deals with the role of cAMP on IL 2 synthesis. In Jurkat cells, IL 2 synthesis appears to be highly regulated by the activity of adenylate cyclase. This was demonstrated by using different means to increase intracellular cAMP level, namely by using permeant cAMP analogs, using the activator of adenylate cyclase, forskolin, using the activator of the alpha subunit of the stimulatory GTP binding protein cholera toxin, and using inhibitors of phosphodiesterase. In addition, prostaglandins E1 and E2 were shown to bind specifically to Jurkat cells, to induce a rise in intracellular cAMP level, and to markedly decrease IL 2 synthesis. All together, these results suggest that in T lymphocytes, the prostaglandin E2 receptor is linked to adenylate cyclase through a GTP binding protein and regulates the production of IL 2 by controlling the intracellular cAMP level.  相似文献   

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We previously described a cell surface antigen, termed Tp44, detected by monoclonal antibody 9.3 on approximately 80% of mature human T lymphocytes. Analysis by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing demonstrated that this antigen consists of two identical 44 kilodalton glycopeptides that form a disulfide-linked homodimer. Competitive binding experiments showed that antibody 9.3 and an anti-CD3 antibody (64.1) recognize distinct antigenic determinants; furthermore, the binding of antibody 9.3 was unaffected by prior modulation of CD3. Thus, Tp44 has no detectable cell surface association with CD3. By itself, antibody 9.3 had no detectable effect on either IL 2 receptor expression or IL 2 release, and did not cause T cell proliferation even when monocytes were present and exogenous IL 2 was provided, indicating that binding of antibody 9.3 does not provide a primary signal for T cell activation. However, the proliferative responses of T lymphocytes activated by phytohemagglutinin, concanavalin A, or an anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody were strikingly enhanced in the presence of antibody 9.3, an effect associated with increased IL 2 receptor expression and increased IL 2 secretion. Antibody 9.3 enabled anti-CD3-Sepharose-activated T cells and anti-CD3 antibody-activated Jurkat cells to release IL 2 in the absence of monocytes. Fab fragments of antibody 9.3 had no effect on anti-CD3-induced IL 2 release by Jurkat cells, whereas F(ab')2 fragments had activity comparable to that of unmodified antibody, indicating that bivalent binding of Tp44 molecules is required for IL 2 secretion. Together, these results suggest that TP44 may function as a receptor for accessory signals in the activation of T cells.  相似文献   

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The murine T lymphoma line, LBRM-33 1A5, requires synergistic signals delivered by phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and interleukin 1 (IL1) for activation to high level interleukin 2 production. The activation signals provided by PHA and IL1 were replaced by the Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin, and the phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA), respectively. These observations supported a two-signal model for T cell activation involving increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) (signal 1) and activation of protein kinase C (signal 2) as necessary and sufficient events. However, biochemical analyses revealed that additional signals were involved in the activation of LBRM-33 cells by both receptor-dependent and -independent mediators. Both signal 1-type mediators, PHA and ionomycin, exerted pleiotropic effects at the concentrations required for synergy with signal 2-type mediators (IL1, TPA). Within 1-2 min of addition, PHA stimulated phospholipid turnover, including hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, Ca2+ mobilization, and protein kinase C activation. The [Ca2+]i increase induced by PHA was due to influx from both intracellular and extracellular Ca2+ pools. Similarly, ionomycin increased phospholipid turnover, [Ca2+]i, and directly affected protein kinase C activity in LBRM-33 cells. In contrast, the signal 2-type mediators, TPA and IL1, appeared to act by distinct intracellular mechanisms. TPA induced a protracted association of cellular protein kinase C with the plasma membrane, consistent with the two-signal activation model. Furthermore, acute TPA treatment inhibited PHA-stimulated inositol phosphate release and Ca2+ mobilization, suggesting that this mediator partially antagonized signal 1 delivery. IL1, in contrast, neither activated protein kinase C directly nor did it positively modulate the coupling of signal 1-type mediators to [Ca2+]i or protein kinase C via the phosphoinositide pathway. The intracellular signal delivered by IL1 is, therefore, generated through a mechanism distinct from or distal to the activation of protein kinase C. These studies indicate that the two-signal hypothesis, in its simplest form, is inadequate to explain the signals required for the initiation of IL1-dependent T cell activation.  相似文献   

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Histamine acts directly on human T cells to inhibit lymphokine production without the involvement of accessory cells. Histamine inhibits the production of interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) by purified human peripheral T cells activated in the presence of either intact monocytes or metabolically inactive fixed Raji and U698 cells as accessory cells. Purified T cells do not respond more than marginally to staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) or phytohemagglutinin (PHA) in the absence of accessory cells. However, activation by the phorbol ester PMA in conjunction with either PHA or the calcium ionophore A23187 induces large amounts of IFN-gamma and IL-2. Histamine suppresses the lymphokine production in these pure T-cell cultures to a similar extent as in monocyte-containing cultures. Histamine is also shown to suppress DNA synthesis by purified T cells cultivated at a low cell density, eliminating any possible involvement of small numbers of contaminating accessory cells. In vitro preactivated T cells are shown to retain their capacity to respond to histamine when stimulated by PMA and A23187 or by mitogen in the presence of Raji cells. The conclusion that histamine acts directly on T cells and does not require accessory cells to induce suppression is further confirmed by the demonstration that IL-2 production by the human T-cell leukemia line Jurkat was significantly suppressed by histamine in a H-2 receptor-restricted manner.  相似文献   

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Interferon (IFN)-gamma production, stimulated by the addition of exogenous interleukin (IL) 2, T cell mitogens, or tuberculin purified protein derivative (PPD) was studied in cultures of separated human mononuclear cells or unseparated peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL). IFN-gamma was induced by the addition of IL 2 to cultures of otherwise unstimulated cells. The minimal concentration of exogenous IL 2 required to cause a reproducible stimulation of IFN-gamma was about 10 U/ml, i.e., approximately 50 times the minimal concentration required to stimulate proliferation in an IL 2-dependent murine cytotoxic T cell line. Approximately 500 to 1000 IL 2 U/ml were required to produce maximal stimulation of IFN-gamma production in otherwise unstimulated cultures. Monoclonal antibody anti-Tac, specific for an epitope associated with the IL 2 receptor (IL 2 R), inhibited IFN-gamma induction by exogenous IL 2 less strongly than induction by phytohemagglutinin (PHA) or concanavalin A (Con A). The highest degree of inhibition was exerted by anti-Tac on IFN-gamma production stimulated with PPD. Stimulation of IFN-gamma induction by exogenous IL 2 and the inhibitory action of anti-Tac on IFN-gamma production were also seen in cultures of irradiated (2000 R) cells. Treatment of cells with subinducing doses of Con A or phorbol myristate acetate increased IFN-gamma induction by exogenous IL 2. Taken together, the data suggest that endogenously generated IL 2 is a major mediator of IFN-gamma induction in PBL cultures stimulated with antigens or T cell mitogens.  相似文献   

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The effect of cyclic AMP-elevating agents on mitogen-stimulated IL2 production was examined. Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) inhibited IL2 production by human peripheral blood T cells stimulated with PHA. In contrast, PGE2 did not inhibit PHA-stimulated IL2 production by the human leukemic T cell line. Jurkat, and often slightly enhanced IL2 production by those cells. Other cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) elevating agents (forskolin, isoproterenol, and the cAMP analogue, dibutyryl cAMP) also inhibited lectin-stimulated IL2 production by T cells, but could not inhibit IL2 production by Jurkat cells. Of the cAMP-elevating agents examined, only cholera toxin (CT) inhibited IL2 production by both Jurkat cells and peripheral blood T cells. Although phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) greatly enhanced PHA-stimulated IL2 production by Jurkat cells. CT remained markedly inhibitory. The combination of PMA and the calcium ionophore, ionomycin, also induced IL2 production by Jurkat cells, and this was similarly suppressed by CT, suggesting that a step after initial second messenger generation was inhibited. A prolonged increase in intracellular cAMP levels was induced by CT in both T cells and Jurkat cells, but the maximal level and the length of elevation achieved in T cells were much less than those observed in Jurkat cells. In contrast, PGE2 caused only a modest and transient increase in intracellular cAMP levels in Jurkat cells compared to that noted with T cells. PGE2 induced a more marked and sustained increase in cAMP levels in Jurkat cells treated with isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX), a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. Moreover, in the presence of IBMX, PGE2 caused a marked inhibition of IL2 production by PHA-stimulated Jurkat cells. Differences in the capacity of PGE2 to induce cAMP could not be explained by disparities in the level of cAMP phosphodiesterase activity as this was comparable in Jurkat cells and in T cells. Thus, these observations indicate that IL2 production by both peripheral T cells and Jurkat cells can be modulated by cAMP-elevating agents. The data suggest that the diminished capacity of PGE2 to inhibit IL2 production by Jurkat cells reflects both a diminished capacity of PGE2 to induce increases in cAMP levels in these cells and an increase in the threshold of cAMP required to inhibit Jurkat cells.  相似文献   

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We have studied the activation of interleukin 1 (IL 1)-dependent and IL 1-independent T cell lines, specifically their capacity to produce and secrete interleukin 2 (IL 2). The IL 1-dependent T cell lymphoma LBRM33-1A5.47, which requires phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and IL 1 to produce IL 2, was compared with the IL 1-independent T cell lymphoma LBRM33-5A4 and T cell hybridomas DO-11.10/S4.4 and 3DO-54.8. The latter hybridomas do not require exogenous IL 1 to produce IL 2 in response to mitogens or ovalbumin (OVA)/I-Ad. Even though IL 1 is not required by these IL 1-independent T cell lines, we tested whether IL 1 could modulate their response but found no significant effect of exogenous IL 1. We then studied the activation of these T cell lines by the calcium ionophore A23187 and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). In the case of the IL 1-dependent line LBRM33-1A5.47, there was a strong response when both A23187 and PMA were used simultaneously. We subsequently found that A23187 can replace PHA, and PMA can replace IL 1 in the activation of this cell line to IL 2 production. These observations suggest that the signal(s) provided by PHA and IL 1 involve at least in part a calcium flux, and activation of protein kinase C. Parallel experiments with the use of the IL 1-independent T cell lines showed a strong response to both agents when used simultaneously. A modest response observed to A23187 alone was always enhanced by the addition of PMA. No response was observed to PMA alone. IL 1-rich P388D1 supernatant could replace the enhancing effect of PMA in the response of the IL 1-independent T cell lines. We suggest that the activating signals provided by A23187 and PMA are at least part of the sequence of events that lead to production of IL 2 in either IL 1-dependent or IL 1-independent T cell lines. In IL 1-independent T cell lines, however, both of the activating signals studied may be delivered through stimulation of the Antigen-MHC T cell receptor.  相似文献   

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T cells from patients acutely infected with malaria exhibit a disease-related stimulation of DNA synthesis in response to Plasmodium falciparum antigen in vitro. This response is weak and short-lived, suggestive of induction of suppressor mechanisms. Exogenous T cell growth factor (IL 2) that was added to antigen-stimulated T cell cultures enhanced proliferation in antigen-responsive cultures, indicating that the lymphocytes expressed IL 2 receptors. In contrast, the addition of IL 2 to cultures that did not respond to antigen had no effect. Antigen-responsive cultures contained endogenous IL 2 as well, and the antigen-induced lymphocyte proliferation was correlated with IL 2 production. However, the results suggested that IL 2 production by the patients' T cells was insufficient or actively shut off, and that this was responsible for the premature cessation of their DNA synthesis. Supernatants from 60% of the T cell cultures treated with malaria antigen and from 30% treated with RBC ghost antigen contained interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), as determined by a cytopathic effect inhibition assay combined with acid treatment and antibody neutralization or by an IFN-gamma-specific ELISA. There was no obvious correlation between antigen-induced lymphocyte proliferation and the presence of IFN-gamma in the culture supernatants. A high IFN-gamma activity was also seen in antigen-treated cultures from P. falciparum-immune donors living in highly endemic malaria areas. In contrast, no IFN-gamma was found in supernatants of antigen-treated T cells from healthy donors or patients with Plasmodium vivax malaria. Thus, the IFN-gamma activity of these cultures appears to reflect the presence of antigen-reactive T cells and may be useful as a sensitive indicator of cellular immunity in P. falciparum malaria.  相似文献   

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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   

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A previous study indicated that Ca++ ionophores in conjunction with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) could induce normal T lymphocytes to express receptors for the T cell growth factor, interleukin 2 (IL 2), to secrete IL 2, and to proliferate (1). Here we used long-term alloreactive Lyt-2+ cytotoxic or T4+ "helper" T cell clones. In response to their specific alloantigen, all of the clones secreted IFN-gamma but only the T4+ clone secreted IL 2 and proliferated in response to the appropriate alloantigen in the absence of exogenous IL 2. The Ca++ ionophore ionomycin and TPA, used in conjunction, mimicked the effect of specific alloantigen on these T cell clones, i.e., they induced the secretion of IFN-gamma in all clones and the secretion of IL 2 in the T4+ clone. In the absence of exogenous IL 2, a proliferative response was induced only for the IL 2 secreting clone. Increased sensitivity to exogenous IL 2 for some T cell clones was also observed after either alloantigen or ionomycin and TPA treatment; this could be correlated with an increase in the expression of IL 2 receptors 6 hr after a pulse with ionomycin and TPA. These results suggest that, for a given T cell clone, activation of the Ca++ -dependent protein kinase c can replace the antigen-receptor triggering events leading to interleukin secretion and increased expression of IL 2 receptors but cannot substitute for the IL 2 dependent triggering of the IL 2 receptor.  相似文献   

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