Natural killer (NK) cell stimulatory factor or IL-12 has differential effects on the proliferation of TCR-alpha beta+, TCR-gamma delta+ T lymphocytes, and NK cells
- PMID: 1358972
Natural killer (NK) cell stimulatory factor or IL-12 has differential effects on the proliferation of TCR-alpha beta+, TCR-gamma delta+ T lymphocytes, and NK cells
Abstract
We have analyzed the effects of NK cell stimulatory factor/IL-12, on proliferation of PBL and their subsets. IL-12 synergizes with lectins and phorbol diesters to induce proliferation of CD4+ and CD8+ peripheral blood T lymphocytes. In the case of phorbol-diester-induced proliferation, the effect of IL-12 is in part mediated by induced IL-2 production, as suggested by the observation that IL-12 enhances IL-2 production in these cultures and that anti-IL-2 antibodies inhibit proliferation. IL-12 synergizes also with anti-CD3 antibodies and with allogeneic stimulation in MLC in inducing T cell proliferation. IL-12 alone is mitogenic for preactivated T and NK lymphoblasts. This mitogenic effect is observed with similar doses of IL-12 on NK lymphoblasts as well as on CD4+ and CD8+ TCR-alpha beta+ and on TCR-gamma delta+ lymphoblasts. On TCR-alpha beta+ T lymphocytes the effect of IL-12 is always additive to that of IL-2 over a wide dose range. The same effect is observed on highly activated, actively proliferating NK cells. However, on NK and TCR-gamma delta+ lymphoblasts reverting to a resting state after stimulation and on a TCR-gamma delta+ acute leukemia-derived T cell line, IL-12 inhibits significantly the proliferation induced by moderate to high doses (10 to 100 U/ml) of IL-2. This inhibitory effect is, at least in part, indirect, and depends on IL-12-induced production of TNF. Neutralizing anti-TNF antibodies, but not anti-IFN-gamma and anti-transforming growth factor antibodies, restore by more than 70% the inhibition of proliferation induced by IL-12 in these cultures. However, TNF alone cannot mimic the inhibitory effect of IL-12 on the IL-2-induced proliferation of NK and TCR-gamma delta+ lymphoblasts, suggesting the involvement of additional mechanisms. The relevance of these findings for the biology of lymphocyte subsets mediating MHC nonrestricted cytotoxicity is discussed.
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