First Author | Kneitz B | Year | 1995 |
Journal | Eur J Immunol | Volume | 25 |
Issue | 9 | Pages | 2572-7 |
PubMed ID | 7589128 | Mgi Jnum | J:28924 |
Mgi Id | MGI:76461 | Doi | 10.1002/eji.1830250925 |
Citation | Kneitz B, et al. (1995) Normal clonal expansion but impaired Fas-mediated cell death and anergy induction in interleukin-2-deficient mice. Eur J Immunol 25(9):2572-7 |
abstractText | Despite a normal development of all major lymphoid subsets, with time, interleukin-2 (IL-2)-deficient mice develop a fatal immunopathology. The disease phenotype is characterized by lymphoadenopathy, splenomegaly, T cell infiltration of various organs, overproduction of a number of cytokines and autoantibody formation. Phenotypically, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells exhibit features characteristic of antigenically experienced cells. The accumulation of cells with a memory phenotype together with the previous suggestion of an involvement of IL-2 in the termination phase of immune responses prompted us to study the fate of superantigen-reactive T cells in IL-2-deficient mice in comparison to their IL-2-producing littermates. We show that expansion in vivo of CD4+ and, to a lesser extent, CD8+ T cells reactive to the superantigens staphylococcal enterotoxin A and B (SEA and SEB) proceeds normally in the absence of IL-2, but that fewer CD4+ cells are subsequently deleted. The residual superantigen-reactive cells fail to become anergic as measured by proliferation in vitro in response to the same superantigen. T cell blasts generated in vitro from lymph node cells of IL-2-deficient mice by superantigen stimulation in the absence of exogenous IL-2 also fail to become anergic. In contrast to cells from IL-2-producing littermates, they do not exhibit Fas-induced apoptosis when cultured on anti-Fas antibody-coated plates, although Fas expression by IL-2-deficient cells is normal or even elevated compared to the IL-2-producing control cells. The data suggest that activation of T cells in the absence of IL-2 fails to generate a signal which is necessary to activate the apoptotic pathway and thus leads to an accumulation of antigen-experienced cells and the chronic inflammatory responses observed in IL-2-deficient mice. |