Abstract

In a previous study, we observed that a cell-free Salmonella typhimurium extract induced suppression of mitogen-induced T-cell proliferation and this suppression involved non-responsiveness of T-cells to interleukin-2 (IL-2). In this study, we found that a cell-free S. typhimurium extract modulated IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) expression on phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated murine spleen cells and this was a mechanism of T-cell non-responsiveness to IL-2, but did not affect IL-2 binding to IL-2R and the consequent responses. Western blotting using anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies showed that IL-2R-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of protein substrates in PHA-activated murine splenic T-cells, which express a high-affinity IL-2R (alpha- and beta-chains), was not affected by treatment with the S. typhimurium cell-free extract. Furthermore, PHA-activated spleen T-cells responded to recombinant IL-2 and this was not inhibited by the extract. Surprisingly, IL-2R expression was augmented by treatment with the extract, although this was independent of IL-2 production. These results suggest that the suppression of T-cell proliferation induced by the Salmonella cell-free extract was associated with augmentation of IL-2R expression, rather than down-regulation of the IL-2 response. This may be a mechanism responsible for the Salmonella extract-evoked suppression of mitogen-induced T-cell proliferation.

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