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Title: Human vascular smooth muscle cells poorly co-stimulate and actively inhibit allogeneic CD4+ T cell proliferation in vitro. Author: Murray AG, Libby P, Pober JS. Journal: J Immunol; 1995 Jan 01; 154(1):151-61. PubMed ID: 7995934. Abstract: We compared immunologic functions of human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) with those of endothelial cells (EC) cultured from saphenous vein. Both cell types can express comparable levels of MHC class II molecules. However, class II-positive VSMCs, unlike ECs, do not stimulate resting CD4+ T cell proliferation. Limiting dilution analyses revealed IL-2-producing cells alloreactive to class II-positive ECs but not VSMCs. Class II molecules on VSMCs are functional, inducing CD25 expression on resting CD4+ T cells and stimulating proliferation of CD4+ T cells that have been pre-activated by ECs. VSMC expression of the co-stimulator molecules CD44, CD54, CD58, and CD59 is comparable to EC expression, and neither VCAM-1 nor B7 are expressed on either cell. However, VSMCs are less efficient than ECs at co-stimulating IL-2 production by PHA-stimulated PBL. VSMCs but not ECs cultured across a Transwell inhibit CD4+ T cell proliferation to allogeneic ECs and, to a lesser extent, IL-2 production in the same assay. Inhibition of proliferation cannot be transferred by VSMC-conditioned media, nor reversed by inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis, TGF-beta 1, or nitric oxide synthesis. CD4+ T cells cocultured with class II-positive VSMCs proliferate to a subsequent challenge with ECs from the same donor as well as freshly isolated T cells. We conclude that VSMCs express functional MHC class II molecules and stimulate pre-activated T cells. However, VSMCs lack adequate costimulators to fully stimulate resting T cells, and VSMCs inhibit T cell proliferation.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]