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    Clin Exp Immunol. 1987 Apr;68(1):146-55.

    Induction of interleukin 2 receptiveness and proliferation in resting peripheral T cells by monoclonal anti-CD3 (T3) antibodies does not require the presence of macrophages.

    Source

    2nd Department of Internal Medicine, University of Vienna, Austria.

    Abstract

    In this study, we sought to elucidate the sequence of events by which mitogenic monoclonal anti-CD3 antibodies (anti-CD3-MoAb) initiate T cell activation. In cultures of monocyte-depleted resting T cells, two anti-CD3-MoAb, OKT3 and anti-Leu 4, induced a state of interleukin 2 (IL-2) receptiveness which culminated in T lymphocyte proliferation when recombinant IL-2 was provided. Evidence that Fc-receptor mediation by monocytes did not contribute to this mitogenesis was supported by studies showing that polyclonal F(ab')2 anti-mouse IgG Fc antibody did not alter the magnitude of the IL-2 driven T cell proliferative response, and by the use of T cells from donors whose monocytes were unable to assist in the induction of anti-Leu 4 (IgG1 subclass) initiated proliferation. Anti-CD3-MoAb, in the absence of IL-2, induced IL-2 receptor expression on purified T cells, and anti-IL 2 receptor antibodies inhibited T cell proliferation in the presence of this growth factor. Furthermore, following modulation of the CD3 molecular complex in the presence of monocytes, depletion of accessory cells rendered the modulated T cells mitogenically dependent on exogenous IL-2. IL-2 itself did not suffice to promote T cell proliferation in the absence of anti-CD3-MoAb. These results indicate that the binding of monoclonal antibody to CD3 is capable of initiating, in an accessory cell-independent manner, premitotic alterations in T cells which can culminate in proliferation when exogenous IL-2 is provided.

    PMID:
    3115639
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1542681
    Free PMC Article

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