We have analyzed the role of membrane potential on T cell activation and cell proliferation. Depolarization of T lymphocytes, by increasing the extracellular concentration of K+ during a 1-hr exposure to PHA, results in a marked inhibition of cell proliferation. In parallel, depolarization of T cells prevented the normal increase in [Ca2+]i seen after PHA binding. In depolarized cells, PHA failed to induce IL 2 secretion, but, in contrast, IL 2 receptor expression was triggered normally and the cells were subsequently responsive to exogenous IL 2. Increasing [Ca2+]i in depolarized cells with the ionophore ionomycin, or bypassing the requirement for an increase in [Ca2+]i with TPA, restored the PHA-induced proliferative response in depolarized cells. These data confirm that a membrane potential-sensitive step, namely, Ca2+ influx and the resulting change in [Ca2+]i, is triggered by PHA. The inhibitory effects of depolarization are mediated through the impairment of IL 2 secretion, but not IL 2 receptor expression. T cell proliferation can therefore be regulated by altering membrane potential, which in turn modulates the extent of the change in [Ca2+]i. This study suggests a role for transmembrane potential in the regulation of the T cell proliferative response.
CITATION STYLE
Gelfand, E. W., Cheung, R. K., Mills, G. B., & Grinstein, S. (1987). Role of membrane potential in the response of human T lymphocytes to phytohemagglutinin. The Journal of Immunology, 138(2), 527–531. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.138.2.527
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