Publication | Open Access
Early events in lymphocyte activation as defined by three new monoclonal antibodies.
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1986
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Lymphocyte ActivationLymphocyte DevelopmentImmune RegulationImmunologyImmunodominanceImmunologic MechanismAntigen ProcessingImmunotherapyEa2 BiosynthesisNew Monoclonal AntibodiesEarly EventsDalton Early AntigenAllergyImmune SurveillanceAutoimmunityCell BiologySignal TransductionCyclosporine AMedicine
Three new lymphocyte activation antigens are described whose kinetics of appearance place them very early in the activation pathway. The 78,000 dalton early antigen (Ea) 1 is present at low levels on resting lymphocytes, and its expression is enhanced twofold to threefold within 3 hr of stimulation. Ea2, a nondisulfide-bonded 86,000 and 73,000 dalton heterodimer, is first detectable 3 hr after activation and peaks by 9 hr. Its presence on all but a few cell lines, plus the variable association with a lower m.w. (28,000) structure, suggest that it may serve as a receptor for a growth factor. Neither Ea1 nor Ea2 are restricted to lymphocytes. The 31,000 dalton Ea3 antigen is induced only by PHA but not by other means of activation, and may pre-exist within the cell. The Ea3 antibody blocks PHA-induced but not OKT3-induced mitogenesis, suggesting differences in the pathways of activation by these two stimuli. These reagents, and OKT3, were used to define the cyclosporine A (CSA)-sensitive stage of lymphocyte activation. CSA blocks at a point before the biosynthesis of Ea1 and after that of T3/T cell receptor loss from the cell surface, at a point close to Ea2 biosynthesis.