Activated, but not resting human Th2 cells, in contrast to Th1 and T regulatory cells, produce soluble ST2 and express low levels of ST2L at the cell surface

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Abstract

The T1/ST2 gene encodes, as a result of differential splicing, a cell surface protein (transmembrane form of T1/ST2, ST2L) and a soluble, secreted, protein (ST2). Here, we show that transcripts for both ST2L and ST2 are present in activated human Th2 clones, but not in Th1 and T regulatory clones. This activation-dependent expression of ST2L/ST2 transcripts was also found in short-term in vitro differentiated, activated CD4+ Th2 cells. No expression of ST2L or ST2 mRNA was detected in any of the resting T cell subsets. Low cell surface expression of ST2L was detected on activated Th2 clones, and on freshly isolated non-IFN--producing CD4+ peripheral blood T cells, activated with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAb. Finally, ST2 could be detected in the culture supernatants of activated, but not resting, Th2 clones. Taken together, these results show that the T1/ST2 gene products are inducible proteins and that human Th2 cells, in addition to expressing ST2L at their cell surface, secrete ST2 following activation.

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Lécart, S., Lecointe, N., Subramaniam, A., Alkan, S., Ni, D., Chen, R., … Yssel, H. (2002). Activated, but not resting human Th2 cells, in contrast to Th1 and T regulatory cells, produce soluble ST2 and express low levels of ST2L at the cell surface. European Journal of Immunology, 32(10), 2979–2987. https://doi.org/10.1002/1521-4141(2002010)32:10<2979::AID-IMMU2979>3.0.CO;2-5

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