Human Endothelial Cells Induce and Regulate Cytolytic T Cell Differentiation

  • Biedermann B
  • Pober J
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Abstract

We compared the capacity of cultured human endothelial cells (EC) vs B lymphoblastoid cells (BLC) from the same donor to stimulate allogeneic CD8+ T cells to differentiate into CTL, assaying for allorestricted cytotoxicity, T cell growth, IFN-γ secretion, and perforin expression. The input cell number affected specificity and potency of the resulting CTL. At low input (<105 cells/well), anti-EC CTL were rarely detected. At high input (>106 cells/well), anti-EC CTL developed that displayed unrestricted, low-titer killing and an unstable phenotype. At intermediate input (1.0–2.5 × 105 cells/well), classical class I MHC-restricted, CD8+, and perforin-positive anti-EC CTL developed with reproducible frequencies. However, under all conditions EC were less efficient stimulators than BLC from the same donor. Anti-EC CTL did not kill BLC, whereas anti-BLC CTL killed BLC and EC from the same donor with comparable efficiency. When CD8+ T lymphocytes were grown in the presence of EC and BLC together, the differentiation of anti-BLC CTL was completely suppressed, while the anti-EC response was intact. The inhibition of the allogeneic anti-BLC CTL response was independent of T cell-EC contact, and proliferation of CD8+ T cells was inhibited by EC-conditioned medium. We conclude that EC are competent but less efficient activators of CTL differentiation than are BLC and that EC actively regulate differentiation and/or expansion of allospecific CTL.

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Biedermann, B. C., & Pober, J. S. (1998). Human Endothelial Cells Induce and Regulate Cytolytic T Cell Differentiation. The Journal of Immunology, 161(9), 4679–4687. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.161.9.4679

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