Ubiquitin-like polypeptide inhibits the proliferative response of T cells in vivo |
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Authors: | Kondoh T Nakamura M Nabika T Yoshimura Y Tanigawa Y |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biochemistry, Shimane Medical University, Izumo, Japan. omfs9@shimane-med.ac.jp |
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Abstract: | The monoclonal nonspecific suppressor factor (MNSF), a lymphokine produced by murine T cell hybridoma, possesses pleiotrophic Ag-nonspecific suppressive functions. Recently, we demonstrated that the recombinant form of the ubiquitin-like segment (rUbi-L) of MNSFbeta, a 15.6 kDa-protein consisting of a polypeptide with 36% homology with ubiquitin fused to the ribosomal protein S30, presented an antigen-nonspecific immunoregulatory action in a manner similar to native MNSF. Although this cytokine has been characterized in vitro, little is known about its effects in vivo. Thus, we investigated whether rUbi-L shows a suppressor activity in vivo. The proliferative response of Con A (5 microg/ml)-stimulated splenocytes of mice treated with rUbi-L (500 ng/body) was notably decreased in a dose-dependent manner (max. 57+/-20%). In contrast, administration of high dose ubiquitin (50 microg/body) showed a little, but significant, effect (30+/-7%). Interestingly, concomitant addition of ubiquitin inhibited Ubi-L-induced suppression. Mice injected with rUbi-L without gelatin did not show any suppressive effect. NA4 (1microg/body), a neutralizing monoclonal antibody against rUbi-L, abolished the Ubi-L-mediated suppression. Therefore, ubiquitin-like polypeptide may be implicated in the immune responses in vivo. |
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