Literature DB >> 1465772

Evidence that stimulator cell-derived IL-6 and IL-1 are released in the mixed lymphocyte culture but are not requisite for responder T cell proliferation.

P L Leenaerts1, J L Ceuppens, J Van Damme, P Michielsen, M Waer.   

Abstract

We investigated whether IL-6 and (or) IL-1 are crucial costimulatory signals in the human MLC with purified responder T cells. With allogeneic PBMC as stimulators, IL-6 and IL-1 were rapidly produced, and reached plateau values of 100-300 U/ml and 200-500 pg/ml after 24 hr, respectively. Irradiated or mitomycin-c treated PBMC could easily be induced (with LPS) to produce IL-6 and IL-1 while no activity was measured after 48 hr in the supernatant of PHA-stimulated T cells, suggesting that in the MLC the monokines were entirely produced by stimulator PBMC. In cultures of responder T cells and stimulator B cells, no IL-6 and IL-1 activity was measured in the supernatant, and only a marginal proliferative response was found. Exogenous IL-6 and IL-1 increased in a dose-dependent way the B-cell-induced alloresponse and induced significant cytotoxicity in the responder cells. Antisera to IL-6 and IL-1 totally inhibited the induced response. The proliferation was accompanied by increased IL-2 production and IL-2R expression. Preincubation of B cells with IL-6 and IL-1 did not improve the proliferation, suggesting direct effects of IL-6 and IL-1 on the T cells. The proliferative responses induced by B cells and exogenous IL-6 and IL-1 represented a fraction of those induced by PBMC. Moreover, in PBMC-stimulated cultures exogenous IL-6 and IL-1 or antisera to these lymphokines did not significantly alter proliferative responses, cytotoxicity, IL-2 levels in the supernatant, or IL-2R expression on responder T cells. We conclude that a role for IL-6 and IL-1 in allogeneic T cell stimulation can be demonstrated in conditions of suboptimal stimulation with B cells. With PBMC, neutralizing antisera to these cytokines do not seem to inhibit the proliferative response, suggesting that these cells are superior in alloantigen presentation either by producing various costimulatory signals or by the fact that due to cell-cell contact stimulator cell-derived monokines cannot be blocked. This finding makes it unlikely that antimonokine therapy will be useful in transplantation.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1465772     DOI: 10.1097/00007890-199212000-00023

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transplantation        ISSN: 0041-1337            Impact factor:   4.939


  1 in total

1.  Identical genetic control of MLC reactivity to different MHC incompatibilities, independent of production of and response to IL-2.

Authors:  V Holán; M Lipoldová; P Demant
Journal:  Immunogenetics       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 2.846

  1 in total

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