Abstract
The signal transduction of IL-2 in NK cells and T cells was compared. On 5 min incubation of these cells with IL-2, we observed tyrosine phosphorylation of 105-kD and 110-kD proteins in NK cells and of 95-kD and 110-kD proteins in T cells. The phosphorylation reached maximal levels in 15 min in both NK and T cells, but the levels were higher in NK cells, which showed superior killing against Daudi cells. With this phosphorylation, p52(shc) was also tyrosine-phosphorylated and p21(ras) was activated by the short term (10 min) treatment of NK and T cells with IL-2. These signals were completely suppressed by anti-IL-2Rβ MoAb, but only slightly suppressed by anti-IL-2Rα MoAb, correlated with the suppression of the class-I-non-restricted cytotoxic activity of NK and T cells by these MoAbs. When tyrosine phosphorylation was inhibited by herbimycin A and genistein, the cytotoxic activities of NK and T cells were nearly completely suppressed. In addition, the tyrosine phosphorylation of JAK3 by IL-2 was more prominent in NK cells than in T cells, but JAK1, JAK2, STAT1α, STAT2 and STAT3 were not phosphorylated. These results indicate that the IL-2 signal flows downstream via both ras-dependent and ras-independent pathways and that the superior killing activity of NK cells depends on their high susceptibility to protein tyrosine phosphorylation by IL-2.
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Yoneda, K., Osaki, T., & Yamamoto, T. (1996). IL-2 signalling in T and natural killer (NK) cells associated with their class I-non-restricted killing activity. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 106(1), 179–186. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2249.1996.d01-801.x
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