T cells infiltrating non-Hodgkin's B cell lymphomas show altered tyrosine phosphorylation pattern even though T cell receptor/CD3-associated kinases are present

1995 
Although tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (T-TIL) from B cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma patients contain tumor-reactive T cells, they display poor proliferation and IFN-gamma production when stimulated through the TCR-CD3. To determine if there was altered signaling linked to TCR-CD3 ligation, tyrosine phosphorylation was examined in T-TIL because it represents an early and critical event in T cell activation. After stimulation with anti-CD3 Ab, Western blotting with anti-phosphotyrosine showed reduced phosphorylation in T-TIL when compared with peripheral blood-derived T cells from normal individuals. The altered phosphorylation was not due to the reduced expression of signaling elements linked to the TCR-CD3 complex. T-TIL expressed normal levels of CD3 epsilon, TCR zeta chain, and the three tyrosine kinases, p56lck (Lck), p59fyn, and ZAP-70. However, in T-TIL, anti-Lck Ab reacted with a 60-kDa protein, which appears to be the phosphorylated form of Lck. Binding of anti-Lck Ab to the 60-kDa protein was blocked by Lck peptide. In addition, anti-Lck Ab immunoprecipitated a phosphorylated 60-kDa protein from gamma-32P-labeled T-TIL that was not seen in normal resting T cells. In vitro kinase assay studies also demonstrated that TCR-CD3 engagement increased the kinase activity of Lck in normal T cells but not in T-TIL. These results suggest that although T-TIL from B cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma patients contain the signal transduction molecules associated with TCR-CD3 activation pathway, they are impaired in tyrosine phosphorylation and Lck activity, which may contribute to the functional defects of these cells.
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