Nelson B H, Willerford D M
Virginia Mason Research Center, Seattle, Washington 98101, USA.
Adv Immunol. 1998;70:1-81. doi: 10.1016/s0065-2776(08)60386-7.
Studies of the biology of the IL-2 receptor have played a major part in establishing several of the fundamental principles that govern our current understanding of immunology. Chief among these is the contribution made by lymphokines to regulation of the interactions among vast numbers of lymphocytes, comprising a number of functionally distinct lineages. These soluble mediators likely act locally, within the context of the microanatomic organization of the primary and secondary lymphoid organs, where, in combination with signals generated by direct membrane-membrane interactions, a wide spectrum of cell fate decisions is influenced. The properties of IL-2 as a T-cell growth factor spawned the view that IL-2 worked in vivo to promote clonal T-cell expansion during immune responses. Over time, this singular view has suffered from increasing appreciation that the biologic effects of IL-2R signals are much more complex than simply mediating T-cell growth: depending on the set of conditions, IL-2R signals may also promote cell survival, effector function, and apoptosis. These sometimes contradictory effects underscore the fact that a diversity of intracellular signaling pathways are potentially activated by IL-2R. Furthermore, cell fate decisions are based on the integration of multiple signals received by a lymphocyte from the environment; IL-2R signals can thus be regarded as one input to this integration process. In part because IL-2 was first identified as a T-cell growth factor, the major focus of investigation in IL-R2 signaling has been on the mechanism of mitogenic effects in cultured cell lines. Three critical events have been identified in the generation of the IL-2R signal for cell cycle progression, including heterodimerization of the cytoplasmic domains of the IL-2R beta and gamma(c) chains, activation of the tyrosine kinase Jak3, and phosphorylation of tyrosine residues on the IL-2R beta chain. These proximal events led to the creation of an activated receptor complex, to which various cytoplasmic signaling molecules are recruited and become substrates for regulatory enzymes (especially tyrosine kinases) that are associated with the receptor. One intriguing outcome of the IL-2R signaling studies performed in cell lines is the apparent functional redundancy of the A and H regions of IL-2R beta, and their corresponding downstream pathways, with respect to the proliferative response. Why should the receptor complex induce cell proliferation through more than one mechanism or pathway? One possibility is that this redundancy is an unusual property of cultured cell lines and that primary lymphocytes require signals from both the A and the H regions of IL-2R beta for optimal proliferative responses in vivo. An alternative possibility is that the A and H regions of IL-2R beta are only redundant with respect to proliferation and that each region plays a unique and essential role in regulating other aspects of lymphocyte physiology. As examples, the A or H region could prove to be important for regulating the sensitivity of lymphocytes to AICD or for promoting the development of NK cells. These issues may be resolved by reconstituting IL-2R beta-/-mice with A-and H-deleted forms of the receptor chain and analyzing the effect on lymphocyte development and function in vivo. In addition to the redundant nature of the A and H regions, there remains a large number of biochemical activities mediated by the IL-2R for which no clear physiological role has been identified. Therefore, the circumstances are ripe for discovering new connections between molecular signaling events activated by the IL-2R and the regulation of immune physiology. Translating biochemical studies of Il-2R function into an understanding of how these signals regulate the immune system has been facilitated by the identification of natural mutations in IL-2R components in humans with immunodeficiency and by the generation of mice with targeted mutations in these gen
白细胞介素-2受体生物学的研究在确立一些基本原则方面发挥了重要作用,这些原则主导着我们目前对免疫学的理解。其中最主要的是淋巴因子对大量淋巴细胞相互作用调节的贡献,这些淋巴细胞包括多个功能不同的谱系。这些可溶性介质可能在初级和次级淋巴器官的微观解剖组织环境中局部起作用,在那里,与直接膜-膜相互作用产生的信号相结合,影响了广泛的细胞命运决定。白细胞介素-2作为一种T细胞生长因子的特性引发了这样一种观点,即白细胞介素-2在体内起作用,以促进免疫反应期间克隆性T细胞的扩增。随着时间的推移,这种单一观点越来越受到质疑,因为人们越来越认识到白细胞介素-2受体信号的生物学效应远比简单地介导T细胞生长复杂:根据一系列条件,白细胞介素-2受体信号也可能促进细胞存活、效应功能和凋亡。这些有时相互矛盾的效应强调了一个事实,即白细胞介素-2受体可能激活多种细胞内信号通路。此外,细胞命运决定是基于淋巴细胞从环境中接收到的多种信号的整合;因此,白细胞介素-2受体信号可以被视为这种整合过程的一个输入。部分原因是白细胞介素-2最初被鉴定为一种T细胞生长因子,白细胞介素-2受体信号研究的主要焦点一直是培养细胞系中有丝分裂效应的机制。在细胞周期进程的白细胞介素-2受体信号产生过程中,已经确定了三个关键事件,包括白细胞介素-2受体β链和γ(c)链细胞质结构域的异源二聚化以及酪氨酸激酶Jak3的激活,还有白细胞介素-2受体β链上酪氨酸残基的磷酸化。这些近端事件导致形成一个活化的受体复合物,各种细胞质信号分子被招募到该复合物上,并成为与受体相关的调节酶(尤其是酪氨酸激酶)的底物。在细胞系中进行的白细胞介素-受体信号研究的一个有趣结果是,就增殖反应而言,白细胞介素-2受体β链的A区和H区及其相应的下游途径明显存在功能冗余。为什么受体复合物要通过不止一种机制或途径诱导细胞增殖呢?一种可能性是这种冗余是培养细胞系的一种特殊性质,而原代淋巴细胞在体内需要来自白细胞介素-2受体β链A区和H区的信号才能实现最佳增殖反应。另一种可能性是白细胞介素-2受体β链的A区和H区仅在增殖方面存在冗余,并且每个区域在调节淋巴细胞生理学的其他方面发挥着独特而重要的作用。例如,A区或H区可能被证明对调节淋巴细胞对活化诱导的细胞死亡的敏感性或促进自然杀伤细胞的发育很重要。通过用A区和H区缺失形式的受体链重建白细胞介素-2受体β链基因敲除小鼠,并分析其对体内淋巴细胞发育和功能的影响,这些问题可能会得到解决。除了A区和H区的冗余性质外,白细胞介素-2受体介导的大量生化活性仍未明确其生理作用。因此,发现白细胞介素-2受体激活的分子信号事件与免疫生理学调节之间的新联系的时机已经成熟。通过鉴定免疫缺陷患者白细胞介素-2受体成分中的自然突变以及通过产生这些基因有靶向突变的小鼠,有助于将白细胞介素-2受体功能的生化研究转化为对这些信号如何调节免疫系统的理解。