Lymphocytes comprise up to 30% of the cells present in human bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and thus could participate in host response to infectious Aspergillus fumigatus conidia. We have examined the possibility that lymphocytes might play a role during early infection by either damaging the fungus or interfering with adherence. When incubated with A. fumigatus conidia for 20 h, highly purified 5-day-old lymphocytes activated with either IL-2 or phytohaemagglutinin, but not untreated lymphocytes, were consistently able to reduce residual fungal biomass as estimated by a metabolic assay. T lymphocytes, but not NK cells, appeared to be responsible for this activity. Lymphocytes bound both A. fumigatus conidia and hyphae, and the antifungal activity of the lymphocytes required direct lymphocyte fungus contact. In a separate set of experiments using release of 51Cr from 51Cr-loaded fungi as an estimate of fungal damage, lymphocyte-induced loss of fungal biomass was found to be due to loss of fungal adherence rather than to direct fungal damage. The detached hyphae were also found to be metabolically intact and to have normal morphology by electron microscopy. These data demonstrate that IL-2- and phytohaemagglutinin-activated lymphocytes exhibit a contact-dependent ability to reduce adherence of germinating conidia of A. fumigatus to a surface.
A key issue regarding the use of stem cells in cardiovascular regenerative medicine is their retention in target tissues. Here, we have generated and assessed a bispecific antibody heterodimer designed to improve the retention of bone-marrow-derived multipotent stromal cells (BMMSC) in cardiac tissue damaged by myocardial infarction. The heterodimer comprises an anti-human CD90 monoclonal antibody (mAb) (clone 5E10) and an anti-myosin light chain 1 (MLC1) mAb (clone MLM508) covalently cross-linked by a bis-arylhydrazone. We modified the anti-CD90 antibody with a pegylated-4-formylbenzamide moiety to a molar substitution ratio (MSR) of 2.6 and the anti-MLC1 antibody with a 6-hydrazinonicotinamide moiety to a MSR of 0.9. The covalent modifications had no significant deleterious effect on mAb epitope binding. Furthermore, the binding of anti-CD90 antibody to BMMSCs did not prevent their differentiation into adipo-, chondro-, or osteogenic lineages. Modified antibodies were combined under mild conditions (room temperature, pH 6, 1 h) in the presence of a catalyst (aniline) to allow for rapid generation of the covalent bis-arylhydrazone, which was monitored at A354. We evaluated epitope immunoreactivity for each mAb in the construct. Flow cytometry demonstrated binding of the bispecific construct to BMMSCs that was competed by free anti-CD90 mAb, verifying that modification and cross-linking were not detrimental to the anti-CD90 complementarity-determining region. Similarly, ELISA-based assays demonstrated bispecific antibody binding to plastic-immobilized recombinant MLC1. Excess anti-MLC1 mAb competed for bispecific antibody binding. Finally, the anti-CD90 × anti-MLC1 bispecific antibody construct induced BMMSC adhesion to plastic-immobilized MLC1 that was resistant to shear stress, as measured in parallel-plate flow chamber assays. We used mAbs that bind both human antigens and the respective pig homologues. Thus, the anti-CD90 × anti-MLC1 bispecific antibody may be used in large animal studies of acute myocardial infarction and may provide a starting point for clinical studies.
Abstract The capacity of purified fibronectin to costimulate human T cell DNA synthesis was examined. Low concentrations of immobilized fibronectin, but not soluble fibronectin, augmented anti-CD3-induced proliferation of highly purified human T cells. In the absence of anti-CD3 stimulation, immobilized fibronectin did not induce T cell proliferation alone or in the presence of IL-2 or phorbol dibutyrate. Although fibronectin is present in high concentrations in the serum, immobilized fibronectin was able to costimulate T cell proliferation when cells were cultured in serum-containing medium. Immobilized collagen type I did not enhance anti-CD3 stimulated T cell responses, whereas gelatin (denatured collagen) and laminin were able to enhance anti-CD3 stimulated T cell responses modestly. The effects of gelatin, however, appeared to be indirect, because it could not enhance responses in medium devoid of fibronectin. Immobilized fibronectin enhanced anti-CD3 induced proliferation of both CD45RA dim and CD45RA bright subsets within both the CD4+ and CD8+ subpopulations of T cells, although cells with the CD45RA dim phenotype were costimulated by lower concentrations of immobilized fibronectin. Enhancement of anti-CD3 induced proliferation by immobilized fibronectin was completely inhibited by a mAb to CD29, the integrin beta 1-chain (4B4) and not by a variety of other mAb. In contrast to its effects on proliferation, 4B4 only partially blocked T cell binding to anti-CD3 and fibronectin-coated macrowells. These findings suggested that the interaction between fibronectin and its receptor transduced a signal to the T cell and did not merely stabilize the interaction between anti-CD3 and the CD3 complex. Further experiments confirmed this observation. Thus fibronectin could enhance anti-CD3 responses when it was immobilized to a separate surface. The augmentation of anti-CD3 stimulated proliferation induced by immobilized fibronectin was also inhibited partially by mAb to either VLA-4 or VLA-5 and completely by a combination of the two mAb. The mAb to VLA-4 not only blocked the capacity of immobilized fibronectin to enhance anti-CD3-induced T cell proliferation but also directly costimulated T cell responses. Thus, at least two fibronectin receptors are involved in fibronectin-mediated costimulation of T cell proliferation. These studies indicate that signals are transduced through the fibronectin receptors, VLA-4 and VLA-5, that augment T cell responses and therefore implicate the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin as an important influence regulating T cell responsiveness in vivo.
CD26 (Ta1, dipeptidyl peptidase IV) is a Mr 105,000 protein expressed at high levels on activated T lymphocytes and is a potential marker of memory T cells. Reciprocal immunodepletion and solid phase double determinant binding studies showed that mAb AC7 and the CD26-specific mAb anti-Ta1 reacted with spatially distinct sites on the same molecule. The proteinase dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) was immunoprecipitated with mAb AC7 and its enzymatic activity directly assayed using an enzyme overlay membrane system. High levels of DPP IV activity were detected on the T cell tumor line CCRF-HSB-2 and on PBMC stimulated by a variety of methods. By itself, soluble mAb AC7 was not mitogenic for T cells but enhanced T cell proliferation that resulted from treatment with phorbol myristic acetate (PMA) in the presence of accessory cells. T cell proliferation was also induced by co-immobilized mAb AC7 and mAb OKT3 (anti-CD3). Cultures of T cells growing in the presence of IL-2 responded with accelerated growth when exposed to a combination of immobilized mAb AC7 and soluble mAb OKT3, a result not seen with freshly isolated T cells.
Cell adhesion mediated by the interaction between integrin alpha4beta1 and VCAM-1 is important in normal physiologic processes and in inflammatory and autoimmune disease. Numerous studies have mapped the alpha4beta1 binding sites in VCAM-1 that mediate cell adhesion; however, little is known about the regions in VCAM-1 important for regulating soluble binding. In the present study, we demonstrate that 6D VCAM-1 (an alternatively spliced isoform of VCAM-1 lacking Ig-like domain 4) binds alpha4beta1 with a higher relative affinity than does the full-length form of VCAM-1 containing 7 Ig-like extracellular domains (7D VCAM-1). In indirect binding assays, the EC50 of soluble 6D VCAM-1 binding to alpha4beta1 on Jurkat cells (in 1 mM MnCl2) was 2 x 10(-9) M, compared with 7D VCAM-1 at 11 x 10(-9) M. When used in solution to inhibit alpha4beta1 mediated cell adhesion, the IC50 of 6D VCAM-1 was 13 x 10(-9) M, compared with 7D VCAM-1 measured at 150 x 10(-9) M. Removal of Ig-like domains 4, 5, or 6, or simply substituting Asp328 in domain 4 of 7D VCAM-1 with alanine, caused increased binding of soluble 7D VCAM-1 to alpha4beta1. In contrast, cells adhered more avidly to 7D VCAM-1 under shear force, as it induced cell spreading at lower concentrations than did 6D VCAM-1. Finally, soluble 6D VCAM-1 acts as an agonist through alpha4beta1 by augmenting cell migration and inducing cell aggregation. These results indicate that the domain 4 of VCAM-1 plays a contrasting role when VCAM-1 is presented in solution or as a cell surface-expressed adhesive substrate.