Biased dependency of CD80 versus CD86 in the induction of transcription factors regulating the human IL-2 promoter

21Citations
Citations of this article
15Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

In addition to the signals obtained by ligation of the TCR, T cells need additional, co-stimulatory signals to be activated. One such co-stimulatory signal is delivered when CD28 on T cells binds to CD80 or CD86 on antigen-presenting cells (APC). In the present study, we analyzed the ability of CD80 and CD86 to co-stimulate human T cells activated by superantigen. Using the Raji B cell lymphoma, which express similar levels of CD80 and CD86, it was found that T cell proliferation was mainly co-stimulated by CD80. To further characterize the consequences of this biased co-stimulatory dependency, we employed a well-defined system of transfected CHO cells expressing human MHC class II together with CD80, CD86 or CD80 and CD86. Proliferation of freshly prepared CD4+ T cells required the presence of either CD80 or CD86. However, IL-2 production reached only suboptimal levels in the presence of CD86 but optimal levels with CD80. To analyze IL-2 transcriptional activity in CD80 and CD86 co-stimulated T cells we used Jurkat T cells transfected with luciferase reporter gene constructs. CD80 induced higher levels of IL-2 promoter-enhancer activity compared to CD86. Furthermore, the activity of transcription factors regulating the IL-2 promoter-enhancer region including activation protein-1, CD28 response element and nuclear factor κB were 4-8 times higher after CD80 compared to CD86 ligation. Our results suggest that the eventual appearance of CD80 on recently activated CD86+ APC is important for the superinduction of IL-2 production and to support vigorous T cell proliferation.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Olsson, C., Michaëlsson, E., Parra, E., Pettersson, U., Lando, P. A., & Dohlsten, M. (1998). Biased dependency of CD80 versus CD86 in the induction of transcription factors regulating the human IL-2 promoter. International Immunology, 10(4), 499–506. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/10.4.499

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free