Abstract

The effect of recombinant interleukin 2 (IL-2) and IL-4, as well as a combination of both lymphokines on human post-natal thymocytes at different maturation stages, was analyzed by culturing highly purified pro-T cells, pre-T cells, double-negative and double-positive thymocyte subsets in the presence of IL-2 and/or IL-4. Both IL-2 and IL-4 responsiveness are developmentally regulated in human thymocytes, since IL-2 and IL-4 responses decline with increasing thymocyte differentiation, double-positive T cells displaying far less proliferation than immature thymocytes. IL-2 and IL-4 may influence pro-T cell growth in both an antagonistic and additive fashion. At low doses, IL-4 inhibits IL-2-supported growth of pro-T cells, whereas, at higher concentrations, this inhibitory effect is masked by the ability of IL-4 to stimulate pro-T cell proliferation. In contrast to peripheral lymphocytes, IL-4 does not down-regulate the expression of the IL-2 receptor light chain on thymocytes. In pro-T cell cultures, IL-2 and IL-4 favour the differentiation of distinct cell populations, namely lymphocytes displaying preferentially a TCR alpha/beta+ and CD4+CD8- phenotype versus predominantly TCR gamma/delta+ and CD4-CD8+ cells, respectively. The effect of IL-2 dominates over that of IL-4, since the composition of cultures set up in the presence of IL-2 plus IL-4 resembles that of cells cultured with IL-2 alone. In synthesis, IL-2 and IL-4 exhibit reciprocal inter-relations in human thymocyte cultures, thus supporting the notion that these lymphokines are implicated in the complex regulation of a local cytokine network.

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