Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

CD8 is critically involved in lymphocyte activation by a T. brucei brucei-released molecule

1993; Cell Press; Volume: 72; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0092-8674(93)90400-k

ISSN

1097-4172

Autores

Tomas Olsson, Moiz Bakhiet, Bo Höjeberg, Å. Ljungdahl, Conny Edlund, Gudrun Andersson, H P Ekre, Wai‐Ping Fung‐Leung, Tak W. Mak, Hans Wigzell, Urszula Fiszer, Krister Kristensson,

Tópico(s)

Immune Cell Function and Interaction

Resumo

T. brucei brucei released a lymphocyte triggering factor (TLTF), which triggered purified CD8+, but not CD4+, T cells to interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) mRNA expression and secretion and to [3H]thymidine incorporation. TLTF also induced mRNA for transforming growth factor beta, but not for interleukin-4. The action of this TLTF on mononuclear cell (MNC) cultures was blocked by anti-CD8 antibodies and by soluble CD8. MNCs from a mutant mouse strain lacking CD8 expression were not triggered by TLTF. IFN-gamma provides a growth stimulus for T. brucei brucei, and infected CD8- mice had much lower parasitemia and survived longer than CD8+ mice. The host-parasite interaction in experimental African trypanosomiasis thus involves parasite release of TLTF, which by binding to CD8 triggers CD8+ cells to produce the parasite growth-promoting cytokine IFN-gamma.

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