IL-21 sustains CD28 expression on IL-15-activated human naive CD8+ T cells

Nuno L. Alves, Fernando A. Arosa, René A. W. van Lier

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

92 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Human naive CD8+ T cells are able to respond in an Ag-independent manner to IL-7 and IL-15. Whereas IL-7 largely maintains CD8+ T cells in a naive phenotype, IL-15 drives these cells to an effector phenotype characterized, among other features, by down-regulation of the costimulatory molecule CD28. We evaluated the influence of the CD4+ Th cell-derived common gamma-chain cytokine IL-21 on cytokine-induced naive CD8+ T cell activation. Stimulation with IL-21 did not induce division and only slightly increased IL-15-induced proliferation of naive CD8+ T cells. Strikingly, however, IL-15-induced down-modulation of CD28 was completely prevented by IL-21 at the protein and transcriptional level. Subsequent stimulation via combined TCR/CD3 and CD28 triggering led to a markedly higher production of IL-2 and IFN-gamma in IL-15/IL-21-stimulated cells compared with IL-15-stimulated T cells. Our data show that IL-21 modulates the phenotype of naive CD8+ T cells that have undergone IL-15 induced homeostatic proliferation and preserves their responsiveness to CD28 ligands
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)755-762
JournalJournal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.
Volume175
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2005

Cite this