TY - JOUR
T1 - Inhibition of lymphokine-activated killer cells by human pulmonary macrophages
T2 - discordance between up-regulation of the beta chain (p75) of the interleukin-2 receptor on CD56+ cells and limited response to interleukin-2.
AU - Yarbrough, W. C.
AU - Wilkes, D. S.
AU - Weissler, J. C.
PY - 1994/2
Y1 - 1994/2
N2 - Previous studies have demonstrated that interaction of interleukin-2 (IL-2) with the beta chain (p75) of the IL-2 receptor on CD56+ cells is necessary for the development of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity and proliferation of CD56+ LAK cells in response to IL-2. Human pulmonary macrophages (PM) are potent inhibitors of LAK cells in vitro, and purified resident human lung lymphocytes show limited LAK activity in response to IL-2, suggesting that IL-2-p75 interactions may be altered locally in vivo. In the current study, human PM or anti-p75 inhibited LAK activity and proliferation of CD56+ cells in response to IL-2. This effect was produced by either live or paraformaldehyde-fixed PM, but not peripheral blood monocytes, suggesting that a membrane signal on PM was responsible for inhibition. Suppression of LAK function and proliferation in response to IL-2 occurred despite a rapid up-regulation of p75 on CD56+ cells after 24 h of incubation with PM. Greater than 70% of CD56+ cells expressed p75 after culture with either live or fixed PM, compared with 10 to 15% at 0 h or after 24 h of incubation in IL-2 alone. p75 dim and p75 bright cells increased equally, suggesting that p75 was being up-regulated on previously p75- cells rather than an overexpansion of one subset of p75+ cells. The increase in p75 expression in the presence of PM paralleled with an increase in IL-2 binding to these lymphocytes. These results suggest that PM inhibit the activation of LAK cells at a point distal to IL-2-p75 binding.
AB - Previous studies have demonstrated that interaction of interleukin-2 (IL-2) with the beta chain (p75) of the IL-2 receptor on CD56+ cells is necessary for the development of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity and proliferation of CD56+ LAK cells in response to IL-2. Human pulmonary macrophages (PM) are potent inhibitors of LAK cells in vitro, and purified resident human lung lymphocytes show limited LAK activity in response to IL-2, suggesting that IL-2-p75 interactions may be altered locally in vivo. In the current study, human PM or anti-p75 inhibited LAK activity and proliferation of CD56+ cells in response to IL-2. This effect was produced by either live or paraformaldehyde-fixed PM, but not peripheral blood monocytes, suggesting that a membrane signal on PM was responsible for inhibition. Suppression of LAK function and proliferation in response to IL-2 occurred despite a rapid up-regulation of p75 on CD56+ cells after 24 h of incubation with PM. Greater than 70% of CD56+ cells expressed p75 after culture with either live or fixed PM, compared with 10 to 15% at 0 h or after 24 h of incubation in IL-2 alone. p75 dim and p75 bright cells increased equally, suggesting that p75 was being up-regulated on previously p75- cells rather than an overexpansion of one subset of p75+ cells. The increase in p75 expression in the presence of PM paralleled with an increase in IL-2 binding to these lymphocytes. These results suggest that PM inhibit the activation of LAK cells at a point distal to IL-2-p75 binding.
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U2 - 10.1165/ajrcmb.10.2.7509162
DO - 10.1165/ajrcmb.10.2.7509162
M3 - Article
C2 - 7509162
AN - SCOPUS:0028371613
SN - 1044-1549
VL - 10
SP - 184
EP - 191
JO - American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
JF - American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
IS - 2
ER -