Regulation by prostaglandin E2 of interleukin release by T lymphocytes in mucosa
- PMID: 8557762
- DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-4652(199601)166:1<130::AID-JCP15>3.0.CO;2-J
Regulation by prostaglandin E2 of interleukin release by T lymphocytes in mucosa
Abstract
Regulation of immune cell activation in lymphocyte-bearing human tissues is a pivotal host function, and metabolites of arachidonic acid (prostaglandin E2 in particular) have been reported to serve this function at non-mucosal sites. However, it is unknown whether prostaglandin E2 is immunoregulatory for the large lymphocyte population in the lamina propria of intestine; whether low (nM) concentrations of prostaglandin E2 modulate immune responses occurring there; and whether adjacent inflammation per se abrogates prostaglandin E2's regulatory effects. To address these issues, intestine-derived lymphocytes and T hybridoma cells were assessed, T cell activation was monitored by release of independently quantitated lymphokines, and dose-response studies were performed over an 8-log prostaglandin E2 concentration range. IL-3 release by normal intestinal lamina propria mononuclear cells was reduced (up to 78%) in a dose-dependent manner by prostaglandin E2, when present in as low a concentration as 10(-10) M. PGE2 also inhibited (by > or = 60%) mucosal T lymphocytes' ability to destabilize the barrier function of human epithelial monolayers. Further, with an intestine-derived T lymphocyte hybridoma cell line, a prostaglandin E2 dose-dependent reduction in IL-3 and IL-2 (90 and 95%, respectively) was found; this was true for both mitogen- and antigen-driven T cell lymphokine release. Concomitant [3H] thymidine uptake studies suggested this was not due to a prostaglandin E2-induced reduction in T cell proliferation or viability. In contrast, cells from chronically inflamed intestinal mucosa were substantially less sensitive to prostaglandin E2, e.g., high concentrations (10(-6) M) of prostaglandin E2 inhibited IL-3 release by only 41%. We conclude that prostaglandin E2 in nM concentrations is an important modulator of cytokine release from T lymphocytes derived from the gastrointestinal tract, and it may play a central role in regulation of lamina propria immunocyte populations residing there.
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