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‘Bystander polarization’ of CD4<sup>+</sup> T cells: activation with high‐dose IL‐2 renders naive T cells responsive to IL‐12 and/or IL‐18 in the absence of TCR ligation
28
Citations
32
References
2003
Year
Responsiveness of CD4+ T cells to the IFN-gamma-inducing cytokines IL-12 and IL-18 is generally thought to be acquired only after stimulation via the TCR. We report herein that stimulation of naive CD4+ T cells with high-dose IL-2 (1000 U/ml) renders these cells responsive to IL-12 and/or IL-18 without a requirement for TCR ligation. Naive CD4+CD62L+ Tcells from normal C57BL/6 mice or from DO11.10/Rag2(-/- )OVA-specific TCR-transgenic mice secreted substantial amounts of IFN-gamma when stimulated concurrently with high-dose IL-2 plus IL-12 or IL-18. mRNA encoding both chains of the IL-12 and the IL-18 receptors was expressed by CD4+ T cells after stimulation with high-dose IL-2. Furthermore, anti-CD3-induced IL-12/IL-18 responsiveness was fully abrogated in the presence of cyclosporin A whereas IL-2-induced IL-12/IL-18 responsiveness was not, reminiscent of the previously reported IL-12+IL-18 innate pathway of T cell activation. Lastly, after stimulation with IL-2+IL-12, naive CD4+ T cells from DO11.10/Rag2(-/- )mice exhibited polarization towards a Th1 phenotype (high IFN-gamma but no IL-4) during secondary stimulation with immobilized anti-CD3. We have coined the term "bystander polarization" to describe this phenomenon and we speculate that bystander polarization of naive CD4+ T cells may occur in vivo during strong antigen-specific immune responses.
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