Title of article :
Differential requirement of protein tyrosine kinase and protein kinase C in the generation of IL-2-induced LAK cell and αCD3-induced CD3-AK cell responses
Author/Authors :
Ting، نويسنده , , Chou-Chik and Hargrove، نويسنده , , Myrthel E. and Wang، نويسنده , , Zhi-Jie and Patel، نويسنده , , Aneeta D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages :
11
From page :
286
To page :
296
Abstract :
This study examined the role of protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) and protein kinase C (PKC) in the signal transduction pathways for lymphocyte activation through IL-2R to generate LAK cells and through TCR—CD3 to generate CD3-AK cells. Two PTK inhibitors [herbimycin A and genistein (PTK-I)] and two PKC inhibitors [calphositin C and staurosporine (PKC-I)] were used in the experiments. It was found that the primary activation pathway through IL-2R was PTK-dependent; that is, generation of both the IL-2-induced proliferative and the cytotoxic responses was completely abrogated by PTK-I and not by PKC-I. Quite different results were obtained with the αCD3-induced CD3-AK cell response. First, the αCD3-induced proliferation was only partially inhibited by PTK-I or PKC-I alone. Second, generation of CD3-AK cytotoxic response was primarily PKC-dependent; that is, only PKC-I induced significant inhibition. Genistein was found to reduce protein tyrosine phosphorylation in both LAK cells and CD3-AK cells, indicating that CD3-AK cells were also susceptible to PTK-I treatment. Further studies showed that PTK-I and not PKC-I suppressed perforin mRNA expression and N-2-benzyoxycarbonyl-l-lysine thiobeneylester esterase production in LAK cells, and the opposite was true for CD3-AK cells. These results indicate that different pathways were employed in lymphocyte activation through IL-2R and TCR—CD3. The former pathway is primarily PTK-dependent. Activation through TCR—CD3 is a more complex event. Induction of a proliferative response can employ either a PTK- or a PKC-dependent pathway, whereas induction of a cytotoxic response is primarily PKC-dependent. Furthermore, it appears that a PTK-independent pathway exists for the induction of a CD3-AK response and thus suggests that activation of the second messenger PKC may not necessarily be preceded by PTK activation.
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology
Serial Year :
1995
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology
Record number :
1850826
Link To Document :
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