Naive CD8 T cells that respond in vivo to Ag and costimulation in the absence of a third signal, such as IL-12, fail to develop cytolytic function and become tolerized. We show in this study that CD8 T cells purified from TCR transgenic mice and stimulated in vitro in the presence or absence of IL-12 form conjugates with specific target cells, increase intracellular Ca2+, and undergo degranulation to comparable extents. Perforin is also expressed at comparable levels in the absence or presence of a third signal, but expression of granzyme B depends upon IL-12. Levels of granzyme B also correlate strongly with the cytolytic activity of cells responding in vivo. In contrast, an increase in CD107a (lysosomal-associated membrane protein 1) expression resulting from degranulation cannot distinguish in vivo generated lytic effector cells from tolerized, noncytolytic cells. Thus, it appears that cells rendered tolerant as a result of stimulation in the absence of a third signal fail to lyse target cells because they are “shooting blanks.”
CITATION STYLE
Curtsinger, J. M., Lins, D. C., Johnson, C. M., & Mescher, M. F. (2005). Signal 3 Tolerant CD8 T Cells Degranulate in Response to Antigen but Lack Granzyme B to Mediate Cytolysis. The Journal of Immunology, 175(7), 4392–4399. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.175.7.4392
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