Abstract

The synthetic immunomodulator muramyldipeptide (MDP) can stimulate B cells. MDP, when used alone, was apparently unable to induce the differentiation or proliferation of resting B cells. In contrast, MDP appeared to synergize with a single recombinant interleukin (IL) to stimulate either their differentiation or proliferation. We used single interleukins to avoid synergistic and antagonistic effects inherent in the use of several factors. IL-2 was found to be sufficient to restore the specific immune response of resting B cells to sheep erythrocytes; MDP greatly increased the number of plaque-forming cells of such IL-2-stimulated B cells. In contrast, IL-4 and interferon-γ (IFN-γ), either alone or in the presence of MDP, had no effect in this differentiation assay. MDP was also able to stimulate polyclonally activated B cells. IL-4 increased the proliferation of anti-IgM-stimulated B cells, leading to enlargement and driving more cells into the cell cycle; these effects were further enhanced by MDP, more cells being induced to proliferate, to enlarge, and to progress into the cycle with a higher frequency of cells in the G1B, S, and G2/M compartments. Intracellular free calcium levels were not increased by IL-4 and/or MDP, and the two compounds did not modify the anti-IgM-induced calcium mobilization. Therefore, MDP appears to amplify cytokine effects in B cell activation, by a mechanism which does not appear to involve free calcium mobilization.

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