Alloreactive or OVA-reactive cloned murine CD4+ or CD8+ T cells that produce IL-2 exhibit greatly reduced cytolytic activity after being cultured with high concentrations of rIL-2. Furthermore, such cells fail to produce lymphokines or proliferate when stimulated with Ag. The duration of this unresponsiveness to Ag correlates with the concentration of rIL-2 to which the cells were exposed; higher concentrations of rIL-2 prolong the period of unresponsiveness. The presence of ionomycin during the cytolytic assay restores lytic activity to cells rendered unresponsive by exposure to rIL-2. These results suggest that rIL-2-induced unresponsiveness to Ag is a consequence of impairment of a calcium-dependent signal important for cytolysis, proliferation, and lymphokine production. Thus, IL-2 appears to be an important lymphokine that regulates T cell responses downward as well as upward.
CITATION STYLE
McKisic, M. D., Lancki, D. W., Cronin, D. C., & Fitch, F. W. (1993). Cytolytic activity of murine IL-2-producing CD4+ and CD8+ T cell clones cycles in response to IL-2. The Journal of Immunology, 151(8), 4055–4066. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.151.8.4055
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