Evidence for Repression of IL-2 Gene Activation in Anergic T Cells

  • Telander D
  • Malvey E
  • Mueller D
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Abstract

The induction of clonal anergy in a T cell inhibits IL-2 secretion because of the development of a proximal signal transduction defect. Fusion of anergic murine T cells to human Jurkat T leukemia cells and formation of heterokaryons failed to result in a complementation of this signaling defect and restoration of murine IL-2 mRNA inducibility. Instead, signal transduction to the human IL-2 gene became disrupted. Heterokaryons formed by the fusion of anergic murine T cells to normal murine T cells also failed to accumulate intracellular IL-2 protein in response to stimulation either with the combination of CD3 and CD28 mAbs or with ionomycin plus a protein kinase C-activating phorbol ester. The results argue against a loss-of-function signaling defect as the sole basis for clonal anergy induction and document the presence of a dominant-acting repressor molecule that inhibits signal transduction to the IL-2 gene within viable anergic T cells.

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Telander, D. G., Malvey, E.-N., & Mueller, D. L. (1999). Evidence for Repression of IL-2 Gene Activation in Anergic T Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 162(3), 1460–1465. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.3.1460

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