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. 1993 Jul;56(1):128-34.
doi: 10.1097/00007890-199307000-00024.

Human CD4+ T cells proliferate to HLA-DR+ allogeneic vascular endothelium. Identification of accessory interactions

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Human CD4+ T cells proliferate to HLA-DR+ allogeneic vascular endothelium. Identification of accessory interactions

C O Savage et al. Transplantation. 1993 Jul.

Abstract

Serially passaged human endothelial cell (EC) cultures will stimulate highly purified peripheral blood CD4+ T cells to proliferate if and only if the EC cultures are pretreated with IFN-gamma to induce de novo expression of MHC class II molecules, principally HLA-DR. HLA-DR-expressing EC alone appear sufficient to stimulate purified CD4+ T cell proliferation without the involvement of other leukocyte populations, as indicated by the following observations: (1) we find no contaminating leukocytes in our EC cultures by FACS analysis or fluorescence microscopy; specifically, there are no detectable CD45 or HLA-DR expressing cells; (2) neither the EC cultures nor the purified CD4+ T cells contain HLA-DR expressing cells detectable by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of reverse-transcribed mRNA; (3) the stimulatory capacity of the EC cultures is maintained through serial subculture and through low-density replating, indicating that the stimulatory cell type must proliferate in culture as well as EC; and (4) in contrast to MLRs, the response to EC cultures is not inhibited by pretreatment of the stimulator cells and/or responding T cells with the monocyte toxin L-leucine-O-methyl ester. We have used mAb to investigate the role of various EC and T cell surface molecules in the T cell response. mAb to HLA-DR and CD4 inhibit proliferative responses of CD4+ T cells to EC cultures, as would be expected if T cells recognize and proliferate to IFN-gamma-induced allogeneic class II MHC molecules; whereas, also as expected, mAb to class I MHC molecules were without effect. Proliferation is also inhibited by mAbs to T cell CD2 and LFA-1 beta chain (CD18) and by mAbs to LFA-3 (CD58) and CD44, which are expressed by T cells and EC. mAb to ICAM-1 (CD54, a ligand for LFA-1) provides inconsistent inhibition, and mAb to ICAM-2, used with or without anti-ICAM-1, is not inhibitory. Because both of these mAb block adhesion of LFA-1 expressing T cells to EC, our data suggest that additional ligands for LFA-1 must be important for allogeneic proliferation. mAb to VLA-4 alpha or beta chains (CD49d, CD29) enhance proliferation, presumably through direct costimulation of the T cells by these antibodies. However, a mAb to VCAM-1, an EC ligand for VLA-4, is partially inhibitory.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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