Tao X, Stout R D
Department of Microbiology, James H. Quillen College of Medicine, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City 37614-0759.
Eur J Immunol. 1993 Nov;23(11):2916-21. doi: 10.1002/eji.1830231128.
Macrophage generation of reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) represents a major effector mechanism in anti-microbial immunity and non-septic inflammatory reactions. The induction of macrophage RNI production has been demonstrated to require at least two signals which in microbial infections can be provided by interferon (IFN)-gamma and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The current study demonstrates that, in the absence of LPS, T lymphocytes can provide cognate signal(s) which synergize with IFN-gamma in stimulating macrophage RNI production, as evidenced by the ability of plasma membranes from T cell clones to activate IFN-gamma-primed macrophages. Although viable resting T cells can activate IFN-gamma-primed macrophages by an interaction that is antigen specific, plasma membranes from resting T cells do not active macrophages. Plasma membranes from T cells activated by immobilized anti-CD3 were able to effectively induce RNI production in IFN-gamma-primed macrophages. However, in contrast to the antigen-specific interaction of macrophages with viable resting T cells, the activation of IFN-gamma-primed macrophages by membranes from activated T cells does not display antigen specificity. Plasma membranes from activated T helper TH2 and from activated TH1 cells were equally effective in activating IFN-gamma-primed macrophages, suggesting that the dominance of TH1 over TH2 cells in cell-mediated responses involving macrophage effectors is not a reflection of differences in their ability to interact with macrophages but rather is a reflection of their different pattern of cytokine production. These results suggest that the T cell-macrophage interaction involves reciprocal activation of both cells--an antigen-specific activation of the T cells which results in the acquisition of T cell membrane components involved in antigen-nonspecific stimulation of the macrophages.
巨噬细胞产生反应性氮中间产物(RNI)是抗微生物免疫和非脓毒性炎症反应中的一种主要效应机制。巨噬细胞RNI产生的诱导已被证明至少需要两个信号,在微生物感染中,这两个信号可由干扰素(IFN)-γ和脂多糖(LPS)提供。当前研究表明,在没有LPS的情况下,T淋巴细胞可提供与IFN-γ协同刺激巨噬细胞RNI产生的同源信号,T细胞克隆的质膜激活IFN-γ预处理的巨噬细胞的能力证明了这一点。尽管活的静止T细胞可通过抗原特异性相互作用激活IFN-γ预处理的巨噬细胞,但静止T细胞的质膜却不能激活巨噬细胞。固定化抗CD3激活的T细胞的质膜能够有效诱导IFN-γ预处理的巨噬细胞产生RNI。然而,与巨噬细胞与活的静止T细胞的抗原特异性相互作用不同,激活的T细胞的质膜对IFN-γ预处理的巨噬细胞的激活不显示抗原特异性。激活的辅助性T细胞TH2和激活的TH1细胞的质膜在激活IFN-γ预处理的巨噬细胞方面同样有效,这表明在涉及巨噬细胞效应器的细胞介导反应中TH1细胞对TH2细胞的优势并非反映它们与巨噬细胞相互作用能力的差异,而是反映它们不同的细胞因子产生模式。这些结果表明,T细胞-巨噬细胞相互作用涉及两个细胞的相互激活——T细胞的抗原特异性激活,这导致获得参与巨噬细胞抗原非特异性刺激的T细胞膜成分。