Publication | Open Access
Activated B cells express receptors for, and proliferate in response to, pure interleukin 2.
357
Citations
44
References
1984
Year
Immune ActivationAdaptive Immune SystemLaboratory ImmunologyImmunologyIl-2 ReceptorsImmunologic MechanismImmune SystemImmunotherapyInflammationB Cell ProliferationCell SignalingAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityHumoral ImmunityIl-2 PreparationsCell BiologyCytokineMedicineImmune Cell Activation
The study examined whether IL‑2 stimulates B‑cell proliferation and whether activated B cells express IL‑2 receptors. The authors used a B‑blast assay with LPS‑plus‑anti‑Ig‑activated murine Ig⁺ cells to test the activity of purified or recombinant IL‑2. IL‑2 stimulated robust proliferation of LPS‑plus‑anti‑Ig‑activated B cells, with each cell expressing ~3,500 IL‑2 receptors (Kd ≈ 150 pM), and the data support IL‑2 as a growth factor for both T and B cells.
In this study we investigated whether interleukin 2 (IL-2) acts on B cell proliferation and whether activated B cells express IL-2 receptors. First, the functional activity of immunoaffinity-purified or recombinant human IL-2 was studied in a B blast assay using positively selected murine surface Ig-positive cells that had been activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) plus anti-Ig antibodies (anti-Ig). In this assay, T cells were not detected by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. It was found that both IL-2 preparations led to optimal B cell proliferation compared with supernatants obtained from murine or human spleen cells or murine cloned T helper cells. Second, we observed that the IL-2 requirement in this assay was about the same as in a proliferation assay using lectin-activated polyclonal murine Lyt-2-positive T cells. Third, analysis of the binding of radiolabeled immunoaffinity-purified IL-2 to B cells indicated that LPS plus anti-Ig-activated B cells expressed a mean of 3,500 IL-2 receptors per cell with an apparent dissociation constant of 150 pM. However, neither nonactivated B cells nor B cells activated by LPS alone exhibited significant specific IL-2 binding. The functional and the receptor data are consistent with the conclusion that IL-2 is a growth factor not only for T cells but also for B cells.
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