Abstract

CD28 is a 44 kDa Ig superfamily cell surface molecule expressed on most mature T cells. Through its interaction with the recently identified B7/BB1 counter-receptor, it is believed to play an important role as a co-stimulator of T cells along with the TCR-CD3 complex. Activation of T cells with CD28 mAbs synergizes with TCR-CD3 and CD2 stimulation, resulting in long term T cell proliferation, differentiation of cytotoxic T cells and production of large amounts of cytokines. In order to further delineate the role of CD28 in signal transduction and T cell activation, human CD28 was transfected into CD3 + murine T cell hybridomas. High levels of cell surface CD28 expression was achieved by protoplast fusion. The transfected molecule retained all the native CD28 mAb epitopes found on human T cells. In these transfectants, CD28 mAbs, similarly to CD3 mAbs, were able to induce Ca 2+ mobilization, IL-2 promoter induction (measured as β-galactosidase activity in T cells hybridomas pre-transfected with the IL-2-lac Z reporter gene), IL-2 secretion, TNF alpha production and apoptosis (observed as growth arrest and genome fragmentation). The parental host cells, or cells transfected with vector alone, responded only to mAbs to CD3. IL-2 secretion in the transfectants was obtained using either an IgM mAb to CD28 or IgG mAbs presented on the surface of IgG-FcR + B lymphoma cells. Optimal activation via CD28 was inhibited by suboptimal concentrations of soluble CD3 mAb, suggesting an interaction between the two pathways. The immunosuppressive drugs Cyclosporin A and FK506 completely blocked CD28 and CD3 mediated IL-2 production in these transfectants whereas rapamycin had only a partial inhibitory effect. Finally, since the transfected human CD28 molecule confers full functional responsiveness to the murine T cell hybridomas without the need for costimulators such as PMA, this model is ideal for studying the structure-function relationships of the CD28 molecule as well as the transmembrane and cytoplasmic associations implied in CD28 signaling.

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