cAMP inhibits induction of interleukin 2 but not of interleukin 4 in T cells.

TJ Novak, EV Rothenberg - Proceedings of the National …, 1990 - National Acad Sciences
TJ Novak, EV Rothenberg
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990National Acad Sciences
In this report, we explore the nature of the inductive stimuli leading to expression of the
divergently regulated lymphokines interleukin 2 (IL-2) and interleukin 4 (IL-4). Elevation of
cAMP levels blocks IL-2 induction while sparing IL-4 induction. These effects are gene-
specific, not cell-specific, and can be observed in the same cells. Transient transfection
experiments using murine IL-2 regulatory sequences to drive expression of a reporter gene
show at least part of the inhibition to act at the transcriptional level. The possible biological …
In this report, we explore the nature of the inductive stimuli leading to expression of the divergently regulated lymphokines interleukin 2 (IL-2) and interleukin 4 (IL-4). Elevation of cAMP levels blocks IL-2 induction while sparing IL-4 induction. These effects are gene-specific, not cell-specific, and can be observed in the same cells. Transient transfection experiments using murine IL-2 regulatory sequences to drive expression of a reporter gene show at least part of the inhibition to act at the transcriptional level. The possible biological significance of these results is indicated by the observation that representative type 2 helper T-cell lines maintain significantly higher levels of cAMP per cell than a type 1 helper T-cell line. Fresh splenic CD4+ T cells, which preferentially make IL-2, have particularly low levels of cAMP per cell and a low capacity to elevate cAMP in response to forskolin. However, their response to forskolin increases significantly after several days of stimulation. These results suggest a potential link between differential cAMP regulation and the divergence of memory T cells into effector subsets.
National Acad Sciences
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