Abstract

Supernatants of mitogen-activated mononuclear cells contain a factor which stimulates, up to fifteen-fold, the synthesis of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) by cultured normal dermal fibroblasts. To demonstrate that the GAG stimulatory factor is a product of T lymphocytes, we cloned normal peripheral blood T lymphocytes that were activated in mixed lymphocyte culture. Selected alloreactive T cell clones were expanded in the presence of original stimulator cells and T cell growth factor. Only supernatants of the clones that were reactivated with irradiated stimulators (allogeneic peripheral blood lymphocytes of B cell lines) were capable of increasing, 3-7-fold, the GAG synthesis by dermal fibroblasts. The production of GAG stimulatory activity by alloreactive T cells was restricted by HLA-DR allorecognition. Alloactivated T cell clones produced more GAG stimulatory activity on a per cell basis than did concanavalin A-activated mononuclear cells. These results show that cloned, activated T lymphocytes are capable of releasing soluble factors that modulate GAG synthesis by normal dermal fibroblasts.

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