The regulation by low-density lipoproteins of the activation of oxidative enzyme-primed lymphocytes is governed by transferrin

The activation of T lymphocytes was regulated in vitro by low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Not all prereplicative events induced by the oxidative enzymatic mitogens neuraminidase and galactose oxidase (NAGO) were susceptible to inhibition by LDL. The accessory cell-independent early blastogenic respo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cellular immunology 1987-09, Vol.108 (2), p.378-395
Hauptverfasser: Scupham, David W., McCarthy, Becky M., Harmony, Judith A.K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The activation of T lymphocytes was regulated in vitro by low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Not all prereplicative events induced by the oxidative enzymatic mitogens neuraminidase and galactose oxidase (NAGO) were susceptible to inhibition by LDL. The accessory cell-independent early blastogenic response was not suppressed. LDL suppressed accessory cell-dependent responses, and the extent of LDL suppression, depended on the concentration of transferrin. A gradient of transferrin determined the point in the cell cycle at which NAGO-primed lymphocytes were suppressed by LDL. When transferrin was low (0–10 μg/ml) and in serum-free medium (SFM), LDL suppressed the expression of cell surface receptors for interleukin-2 (IL-2R) and transferrin (TfR), the late blastogenic response prior to DNA replication (72 hr), and DNA replication. At higher levels of transferrin, about 100 μg/ml, the LDL-suppressed cells were IL-2R +, TfR + and responsive to IL-2, but did not enter S phase. LDL suppression could be ablated by IL-2 and by high levels of transferrin (250–1000 μg/ml). In RPMI medium containing serum (FBS), the pattern of LDL suppression was different from that in SFM: fully activated IL-2R +, TfR + lymphocytes were unresponsive to exogenous IL-2, suggesting that they were blocked at the G 1/S boundary. This block was also relieved by transferrin (> 100 μg/ml). The data suggest that the interplay between transferrin and LDL is a critical factor in the NAGO-induced stimulation of T lymphocytes. LDL and transferrin exert negative and positive control of lymphocyte activation, respectively. In SFM, LDL appear to alter transferrin utilization by accessory cells; in RPMI-FBS, by fully activated T lymphocytes.
ISSN:0008-8749
1090-2163
DOI:10.1016/0008-8749(87)90221-8