Imatinib inhibits the activation and proliferation of normal T lymphocytes in vitro. |
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Authors: | K Cwynarski R Laylor E Macchiarulo J Goldman G Lombardi J V Melo F Dazzi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Immunology, Division of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College at Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK. |
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Abstract: | The ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate is highly effective in the treatment of CML and is increasingly used in the stem cell transplantation (SCT) setting. Since ABL-dependent intracellular signaling molecules are involved in T-cell activation, imatinib may affect T-cell responses in vivo, thus affecting T-cell function in CML patients, disrupting immune reconstitution after allogeneic SCT and/or impeding the graft-versus-leukemia effect. Here we demonstrate that imatinib inhibits PHA-induced proliferation of normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells at in vitro concentrations (1-5 micromol/l) representative of the pharmacological doses used therapeutically in vivo. The effect is not dependent on antigen-presenting cells because CD3/CD28-induced T-cell stimulation was similarly inhibited by imatinib. Dose-dependent inhibition of the proliferative response of purified CD8+ and CD4+ T lymphocytes to anti-CD3/CD28 was similarly observed and associated with reduction in IFN-gamma production. The inhibitory effect could not be ascribed to an increased rate of apoptosis but the expression of activation markers on CD3+ T cells was significantly reduced in the presence of imatinib (1-5 micromol/L). Inhibition of T-cell proliferation was reversible after removal of the drug from the cultures. Thus, imatinib inhibits T-cell proliferation in vitro, an effect that is APC-independent, reversible, and does not involve apoptosis induction. |
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