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Antigen-independent responsiveness to interleukin-4 demonstrates differential regulation of newborn human T cells

✍ Scribed by Eavan M. Early; Denis J. Reen


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
553 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0014-2980

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✦ Synopsis


Antigen-independent responsiveness to interleukin-4 demonstrates differential regulation of newborn human T cells

Children's Research Centre, Our Ladv's HosDital For Sick Children.

Dudlin, Irdand

The low incidence of graft-versus-host disease following clinical use of umbilical cord blood compared to adult bone marrow as a source of stem cells for bone marrow reconstitution, leads to questions concerning the level of immunocompetence of newborn T cells. The maturation and functional status of newborn CD4+ T cells, which are almost exclusively CD45RA' naive T cells, compared with their adult phenotypic counterparts, is poorly understood. We examined the proliferative response to mitogens and cytokines of CD4/CD45RA' T cells from adults and newborns, with and without accessory cells. Newborn CD4/ CD45RA' T cells demonstrated a distinct proliferative response profile which was determined by the number of accessory cells present in co-cultures with various stimuli. Newborn CD4/CD45RA' T cells were particularly responsive to interleukin (1L)-4, IL-4 plus anti-CD2 monoclonal antibodies (mAb) and IL-4 plus phytohemagglutinin (PHA), whereas adult CD4/CD45RA' T cells were unresponsive under similar conditions. The mitogenic responses of newborn and adult CD4/CD45RAf T cells to PHA and anti-CD2 mAb, which were equivalent, were directly proportional to the number of accessory cells present, whereas the responsiveness to cytokines was inversely proportional to the number of co-cultured accessory cells. Anti-CD2 responses were much more sensitive to low numbers of accessory cells than PHA. The particular sensitivity of newborn CD4/CD45RA+ T cells to IL-4 represents an antigen-independent T cell activation response which could help promote a Th2 immune response resulting in the newborn.


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