1. Intestinal epithelial cells from inflammatory bowel disease patients preferentially stimulate CD4+ T cells to proliferate and secrete interferon-γ.
- Author
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Dotan, Iris, Allez, Matthieu, Nakazawa, Atsushi, Brimnes, Jens, Schulder-Katz, Micoll, and Mayer, Lloyd
- Subjects
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EPITHELIAL cells , *INTERFERONS , *CELL proliferation , *T cells , *CROHN'S disease , *ULCERATIVE colitis , *CYTOKINES - Abstract
Previous studies have suggested that intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) have the capacity to function as nonprofessional antigen presenting cells that in the normal state preferentially activate CD8+ T cells. However, under pathological conditions, such as those found in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), persistent activation of CD4+ T cells is seen. The aim of this study was to determine whether the IBD IECs contribute to CD4+ T cell activation. Freshly isolated human IECs were obtained from surgical specimens of patients with or without IBD and cocultured with autologous or allogeneic peripheral blood T lymphocytes. Cocultures of normal T cells and IECs derived from IBD patients resulted in the preferential activation of CD4+ T cell proliferation that was associated with significant 1FN-γ, but not IL-2, secretion. Cytokine secretion and CD4+ T cell proliferation was inhibited by pretreatment of the IBD IECs with the anti-DR MAb L243. In contrast, normal IECs stimulated the proliferation and cytokine secretion by CD4+ T cells to a significantly lesser degree than IBD IECs. Furthermore, blockade of human leukocyte antigen-DR had a lesser effect in the normal IEC-CD4+ T cell cocultures. We conclude that IECs can contribute to the ongoing CD4+ T cell activation seen in IBD. We suggest that the apparent differences between the secreted levels of IFN-γ indicate that it may play a dual role in intestinal homeostasis, in which low levels contribute to physiological inflammation whereas higher levels are associated with an uncontrolled inflammatory state. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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