Abstract

Antiphosphotyrosine immunoblots were used to characterize phosphotyrosine-containing proteins (PY-PPNs) in anti-CD3 stimulated murine T lymphocytes. Activation led to increased phosphorylation of three PY-PPNs (MWs of 120, 80, and 40 kD) within 2 minutes, and maximal phosphoprotein levels were sustained for at least 30 min. There was a progressive decline with age in the responses of these three PY-PPNs to anti-CD3 stimulation, and some 20-23-month-old mice were virtually nonresponsive. A second group of PY-PPNs was present in unstimulated cells and not affected by anti-CD3 treatment or by age. Responses to Con A and to an antibody to the T-cell receptor were also found to be lower in old mice. Our data show that the pattern of tyrosine-specific phosphorylation in normal murine T cells is similar but not identical to patterns previously defined in murine tumor T-cell lines, and that T cells in old mice have defects in tyrosine-specific phosphorylation that could contribute to their diminished responsiveness to mitogenic stimuli.

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