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  • Title: Analysis of the role of interferon-gamma, interleukin 2 and a third factor distinct from interferon-gamma and interleukin 2 in human B cell proliferation. Evidence that they act at different times after B cell activation.
    Author: Romagnani S, Giudizi GM, Almerigogna F, Biagiotti R, Alessi A, Mingari C, Liang CM, Moretta L, Ricci M.
    Journal: Eur J Immunol; 1986 Jun; 16(6):623-9. PubMed ID: 3087756.
    Abstract:
    Recombinant interferon-gamma (rIFN-gamma) was able to induce proliferation of human tonsillar B cells activated with suboptimal concentrations of anti-mu antibody. The B cell growth factor (BCGF) activity of rIFN-gamma was not due to substances contaminating the IFN-gamma preparation, nor was it mediated by factors released by T cells or large granular lymphocytes following activation by rIFN-gamma. The response of B cells to rIFN-gamma peaked on day 3 of culture and rapidly declined thereafter, whereas the response of parallel anti-mu-activated B cell cultures to recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL2) appeared on day 3, but continued at least until day 5. In addition, B cells responsive to rIFN-gamma could be at least in part separated from those responsive to rIL2, the former being primarily contained in B cell fractions enriched for high-density small B lymphocytes. Finally, the addition to anti-mu-stimulated B cell cultures of very low concentrations of rIFN-gamma potentiated the B cell proliferation promoted by rIL2. The simultaneous addition of monoclonal antibodies against IFN-gamma and T cell activation antigen to anti-mu-stimulated B cell cultures strongly reduced the B cell proliferative response promoted by three different crude BCGF preparations obtained by polyclonal T cell activation in mixed lymphocyte culture. However, the supernatant from a T cell clone (DP5/11) apparently free of IL2, which manifested a BCGF activity similar to that of rIFN-gamma, still maintained its ability to promote proliferation of anti-mu-activated B cells after complete removal of IFN-gamma. Taken together, our data indicate that although some T cell clones are able to produce a BCGF distinct from both IFN-gamma and IL2, these lymphokines account for most of the BCGF activity of supernatants obtained from polyclonal T cell populations. They also suggest that IFN-gamma and the BCGF distinct from IFN-gamma and IL2 act primarily in the earlier phases of B cell activation and potentiate the proliferative response of activated B cells to IL2.
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