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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ir.csmu.edu.tw:8080/ir/handle/310902500/10553


    Title: Engagement of CD14 on human monocytes terminates T cell proliferation by delivering a negative signal to T cells.
    Authors: Lue, KH
    Lauener, RP
    Winchester, RJ
    Geha, RS
    Vercelli, D
    Contributors: 中山醫學大學
    Date: 1991
    Issue Date: 2015-03-27T07:37:40Z (UTC)
    Abstract: Abstract
    We have recently shown that engagement of the human monocytic Ag CD14 by murine mAb induces lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1/intercellular adhesion molecule-1-dependent homotypic adhesion. To determine whether CD14 plays a role in monocyte-T cell interactions, we tested the effect of anti-CD14 mAb on the proliferation of human T cells. Our results show that anti-CD14 mAb strongly inhibited T cell proliferation induced by Ag, anti-CD3 mAb, and mitogenic lectins. Inhibition by anti-CD14 mAb was epitope-dependent and required physical contact between monocytes and T cells. CD14 engagement did not affect IL-2R expression or IL-2 synthesis but induced a state of unresponsiveness that was not IL-2 specific; proliferation of anti-CD3-activated T cell blasts in response to both IL-2 and IL-4 was abrogated by addition of monocytes preincubated with anti-CD14 mAb. Inhibition of T cell proliferation after engagement of CD14 on monocytes was likely to result from delivery of a negative signal to T cells, rather than from disruption of a costimulatory monocyte-derived signal, because incubation of monocytes with anti-CD14 mAb also inhibited monocyte-independent T cell proliferation induced by PMA and ionophore. These results, together, point to a role of CD14 in the monocyte-dependent regulation of T cell proliferation.
    URI: https://ir.csmu.edu.tw:8080/ir/handle/310902500/10553
    Relation: J Immunol. 1991 Aug 15;147(4):1134-8.
    Appears in Collections:[醫學系] 期刊論文

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