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Title: Suppression of IL-2-induced T cell proliferation and phosphorylation of STAT3 and STAT5 by tumor-derived TGF beta is reversed by IL-15. Author: Campbell JD, Cook G, Robertson SE, Fraser A, Boyd KS, Gracie JA, Franklin IM. Journal: J Immunol; 2001 Jul 01; 167(1):553-61. PubMed ID: 11418694. Abstract: IL-2 responses are susceptible to suppression by TGFbeta, a cytokine widely implicated in suppression of inflammatory responses and secreted by many different tumor cell types. There have been conflicting reports regarding inhibition of IL-2-induced STAT3 and STAT5 phosphorylation by TGFbeta and subsequent suppression of immune responses. Using TGFbeta-producing multiple myeloma tumor cells we demonstrate that tumor-derived TGFbeta can block IL-2-induced proliferation and STAT3 and STAT5 phosphorylation in T cells. High affinity IL-2R expression was required for the suppression of IL-2 responses as a novel CD25(-) T cell line proliferated and phosphorylated STAT3 when cultured with tumor cells or rTGFbeta1. Activating T cells with IL-15, which does not use the high affinity IL-2R, completely restored the ability of T cells to phosphorylate STAT3 and STAT5 when cultured with tumor cells. IL-15-treated T cells proliferated normally when cocultured with tumor cells or rTGFbeta1, whereas IL-2 responses were consistently inhibited. Preincubation with IL-15 also restored the ability of T cells to respond to IL-2 by phosphorylating STAT3 and STAT5, and proliferating normally in the presence of tumor cells. IL-2 pretreatment did not restore T cell function. IL-15 also restored T cell responses by T cells from multiple myeloma patients, and against freshly isolated bone marrow tumor samples. Thus, activation of T cells by IL-15 renders T cells resistant to suppression by TGFbeta1-producing tumor cells and rTGFbeta1. This finding may be exploited in the design of new immunotherapy approaches that will rely on T cells avoiding tumor-induced suppression.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]