Abstract

The lymphokines IL-2 and IL-4 promoted the growth of human PHA-triggered T cells, but only IL-2 induced the production of IFN-gamma and TNF. The addition of purified monocytes strongly enhanced the production of IFN-gamma in IL-2-stimulated T cell cultures but did not influence the production of TNF or the level of T cell proliferation. The addition of IL-1 to T cells activated by PHA and optimal concentrations of IL-2 resulted in a strong induction of IFN-gamma production but had no influence on TNF production or T cell proliferation. IL-6 did not influence IFN-gamma or TNF production or T cell proliferation induced by PHA-IL-2 and did not modulate IL-1-induced IFN-gamma production. The production of IFN-gamma by CD4+ 45R+ Th cells was strongly enhanced by IL-1, whereas CD8+ T cells were less responsive to IL-1 and CD4+ 45R+ T cells were unresponsive to IL-1. We demonstrate, at the clonal level, that the optimal production of IFN-gamma by human Th cells requires both IL-1 and IL-2, whereas the production of TNF and T cell proliferation are induced by IL-2 alone. We suggest that IL-1 acts as a second signal for IFN-gamma production and that it may have an important function in regulating the pattern of lymphokines produced by T cell subsets during activation.

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