Volume 17, Issue 5 pp. 683-687
Article
Full Access

Interleukin 2 pathway is autonomously activated in human T11+3468 thymocytes

Antonio De La Hera

Antonio De La Hera

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid

Search for more papers by this author
Maria Luisa Toribio

Maria Luisa Toribio

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid

Search for more papers by this author
Miguel A. R. Marcos

Miguel A. R. Marcos

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid

Search for more papers by this author
Carlos Marquez

Carlos Marquez

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid

Search for more papers by this author
Carlos Martinez-A

Corresponding Author

Carlos Martinez-A

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid

Centro de Biologia Molecular, CSIC, Universidad Autonoma, Cantoblanco, Madrid 28049, SpainSearch for more papers by this author
First published: 1987
Citations: 16

Abstract

Mitogenic membrane ligands have been shown to activate interleukin 2 (IL2) production only in mature T cells, IL2 constitutive secretion having not yet been demonstrated. Here we have isolated a population of T11+3468 human thymocytes and CD7+/T113468 prothymocytes which produce and consume IL2 upon phytohemagglutinin triggering. Interestingly, their proliferation in the absence of any exogenous stimulating agent was related to an autonomous use of the IL2 system (IL2 secretion and binding to its specific receptor, whose constitutive, functional expression in human early thymocytes was recently shown). The internal activation of this system before T cell receptor acquisition stresses the relevance of the understanding of the alternative activation pathway(s) in T cell development. These findings, together with the demonstration of IL2-promoted differentiation of human early thymocytes into mature T cells, suggest that IL2 may also be a growth and differentiation factor acting specifically early in T cell development.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.