Abstract

T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation, leading to T cell activation and ultimately to cell proliferation and differentiation, evokes elevations of [Ca 2+] i with a high variability between individual T lymphocytes. We have used ca 2+-imaging of Fura-2 loaded cells to study the origin of the variation in Ca 2+ signals and its consequences for the final cellular response. We found that, compared to resting cells, the percentage of responding cells and the average amplitude of the Ca 2+ signal upon TCR re-stimulation by PHA increases in the first 5 days of T cell activation and declines thereafter, with more pronounced [Ca 2+] i oscillations in later stages. In parallel, an enhancement of T cell proliferation is observed. Stronger stimulation of the TCR/CD3 complex by co-crosslinking CD3 with CD4/CD8 molecules evokes oscillating Ca 2+ responses irrespective of the activation state, indicating that the basic capacity for Ca 2+ signaling is essentially the same in resting and activated cells. Nevertheless, also the amplitude of the CD3+CD4/8 response shows a transient additional increase during the first days of T cell activation. Experiments with the K + channel blocker charybdotoxin (CTX) indicate that [Ca 2+] i oscillations depend critically on K + channel functioning, but suppression of these oscillations by CTX does not significantly affect the average amplitude of the Ca 2+ signal nor PHA-induced proliferation. However, when applied during the first 4–5 days of activation, CTX reduces in addition the average level of the TCR evoked Ca 2+ response and inhibits subsequent proliferation.

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