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Lipopolysaccharide enhances in vivo interleukin-2 production and proliferation by naive antigen-specific CD4 T cells via a Toll-like receptor 4-dependent mechanism
Authors:Costalonga Massimo  Zell Traci
Affiliation:Department of Developmental and Surgical Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. costa002@umn.edu
Abstract:Microbial adjuvants are essential for the development of T-cell-dependent antibody production, recall T-cell proliferation and interferon-gamma production following immunization with protein antigens. Using an adoptive transfer approach, we showed that the adjuvant lipopolysaccharide enhanced the frequency of cells producing interleukin-2, enhanced clonal expansion by antigen-specific CD4 T cells and increased CD86 and interleukin-1alpha production by antigen-presenting cells. All of these effects were dependent on Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4) expression by cells other than the antigen-specific CD4 T cells. The ability of lipopolysaccharides to increase the number of antigen-specific CD4 T cells that survive after immunization probably explains the previous finding that antigen-specific proliferation by T cells from normal mice depends on previous exposure to antigen and adjuvant.
Keywords:adjuvants  cellular proliferation  costimulation  lipopolysaccharide  T lymphocytes
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