Human Neutrophil-Expressed CD28 Interacts with Macrophage B7 to Induce Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase-Dependent IFN-γ Secretion and Restriction of Leishmania Growth
Author(s) -
K. Venuprasad,
Pinaki P. Banerjee,
Subhasis Chattopadhyay,
Satyan Sharma,
Subrata Pal,
P. B. Parab,
Debashis Mitra,
Bhaskar Saha
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.169.2.920
Subject(s) - cd80 , biology , secretion , cd86 , phosphatidylinositol , cd28 , wortmannin , microbiology and biotechnology , cytokine , interferon gamma , immunology , signal transduction , t cell , immune system , in vitro , cytotoxic t cell , cd40 , endocrinology , biochemistry
We previously showed that CD28 is expressed on human peripheral blood neutrophils and plays an important role in CXCR-1 expression and IL-8-induced neutrophil migration. In this work we demonstrate that Leishmania major infection of macrophages results in parasite dose-dependent IL-8 secretion in vitro and in IL-8-directed neutrophil migration, as blocked by both anti-IL-8 and anti-IL-8R Abs, toward the L. major-infected macrophages. In the neutrophil-macrophage cocultures, both CTLA4-Ig, a fusion protein that blocks CD28-CD80/CD86 interaction, and a neutralizing anti-IFN-gamma Ab inhibit the anti-leishmanial function of neutrophils, suggesting that the neutrophil-macrophage interaction via CD28-CD80/CD86 plays an important role in the IFN-gamma-dependent restriction of the parasite growth. Cross-linking of neutrophil-expressed CD28 by monoclonal anti-CD28 Ab or B7.1-Ig or B7.2-Ig results in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase association with CD28 and in wortmannin-sensitive but cyclosporin A-resistant induction and secretion of IFN-gamma. Whereas the neutrophils secrete IFN-gamma with CD28 signal alone, the T cells do not secrete the cytokine in detectable amounts with the same signal. Thus, neutrophil-expressed CD28 modulates not only the granulocyte migration but also induction and secretion of IFN-gamma at the site of infection where it migrates from the circulation.
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