The capacity of the natural ligands for CD28 to drive IL-4 expression in naive and antigen-primed
2005
The B7/CD28 costimulatory pathway plays a critical role in T cell activation including Th1/Th2 differentiation. However, little is known about whether CD28 costimulation favors polarization of either Th1 and Th2 or both. Here, we show a critical role of the natural ligands for CD28 molecules (B7.2-Ig or B7.1-Ig fusion proteins), particularly in the induction of type 2 T cell polarization. Upon TCR-triggering with suboptimal doses of anti-CD3, costimulation of naive CD4 1 T cells with anti-CD28 mAb or B7-Ig fusion proteins led to comparable levels of IFN-c production. Naive T cells could produce IL-4 when CD28 costimulation was done with B7-Ig, but not with anti-CD28. IL-4-selective upregulation was also observed when T cells from anti-OVA TCR transgenic mice were stimulated with OVA in the presence of B7-Ig. Correlating with IL-4 expression, GATA-3 expression was induced much more potently by costimulation with B7-Ig than with anti-CD28 mAb, while T-bet induction by these two costimulatory reagents was comparable. This B7 effect was also applied for naive and antigen-primed CD8 1 T cells: IL-4-expressing CD8 1 T cells were generated when naive and alloantigen-primed T cells were stimulated with anti-CD3 and recall antigens, respectively, in the presence of B7-Ig costimulation. Importantly, such CD8 1 T cell differentiation required the coexistence of CD4 1 T cells during the initial TCR stimulation. These observations indicate that both type 2 CD4 and CD8 T cell polarizations are efficiently induced via costimulation of CD28 with its natural ligands, although the differentiation of CD8 1 T cells is dependent on CD4 1 cells.
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