Abstract

The luteal microenvironment is thought to direct the function of resident immune cells to facilitate either luteal function or regression. To determine if luteal cells from functional (Days 10-12) and regressing (8 h after administration of prostaglandin F2alpha) corpora lutea (CL) induce different responses in γδ T cells, luteal cells were cocultured with autologous γδ T cells isolated from peripheral blood. Proliferation, functional phenotypes, and cytokine synthesis were analyzed by flow cytometry. To determine if the luteal cells from functional CL induce hyporesponsiveness in γδ T cells, γδ(+) cells were cocultured with midcycle luteal cells and further stimulated with concanavalin A. Coculture of γδ(+) cells with midcycle luteal cells did not inhibit concanavalin A-induced proliferation. In a proliferation assay, luteal cells from midcycle CL predominantly induced proliferation of γδ(+) WC1(-) cells (P < 0.05), while luteal cells from regressing CL predominantly induced proliferation of γδ(+)WC1(+) cells (P < 0.05). Analysis of intracellular cytokines indicated that midcycle luteal cells increased the proportion of γδ(+) cells containing interleukin 10 (P < 0.05), but reduced the proportion of γδ(+) cells containing interferon gamma (IFNG; P < 0.05). There were no changes in the proportions of γδ(+) cells synthesizing interleukin 4 or tumor necrosis factor. Unexpectedly, coculture of γδ(+) cells with luteal cells from regressing CL had no effect on any of the cytokines analyzed. These data support the hypothesis that the function of resident T cells is differentially modulated depending on the status of the CL.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call