IL-2 knockout recipient mice reject islet cell allografts.

J Steiger, PW Nickerson, W Steurer… - … (Baltimore, Md.: 1950 …, 1995 - journals.aai.org
J Steiger, PW Nickerson, W Steurer, M Moscovitch-Lopatin, TB Strom
Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950), 1995journals.aai.org
The IL-2 pathway is portrayed often as central to allograft rejection. To test this hypothesis,
we studied IL-2-deficient mice as allograft recipients. IL-2 gene knockout (KO) mice reject
islet allografts and demonstrate a classical mononuclear leukocytic infiltrate, containing
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, surrounding and invading the islet allografts. Moreover, allograft
rejection in the IL-2 KO mouse is associated with intragraft expression of certain cytokine
and CTL attack molecule genes (eg IFN-gamma, IL-4, IL-7, IL-10, and granzyme B). In …
Abstract
The IL-2 pathway is portrayed often as central to allograft rejection. To test this hypothesis, we studied IL-2-deficient mice as allograft recipients. IL-2 gene knockout (KO) mice reject islet allografts and demonstrate a classical mononuclear leukocytic infiltrate, containing CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, surrounding and invading the islet allografts. Moreover, allograft rejection in the IL-2 KO mouse is associated with intragraft expression of certain cytokine and CTL attack molecule genes (e.g. IFN-gamma, IL-4, IL-7, IL-10, and granzyme B). In separate experiments, IL-2 KO mice generated CTLs in response to in vivo challenge with allogeneic tumor cells. Although IL-2 KO mice reject allografts in vivo, spleen cells from immunologically naive IL-2 KO mice exhibit a diminished proliferative response to mitogens in vitro that could be restored largely by exogenous IL-2, IL-4, or IL-7. The paradoxical ability to execute graft rejection in vivo despite near absent T cell proliferative responses in vitro may result from the expression of IL-7 in vivo, but not in vitro. Con A-stimulated bulk spleen cell cultures derived from IL-2 KO mice were essentially devoid not only of IL-2 but also IL-7 gene transcripts. These data indicate that 1) IL-2 is not the sole T cell growth factor capable of supporting allograft rejection and 2) expression of IL-4, but not IL-2, during the allograft response does not lead inevitably to tolerance.
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