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*
Experimental Immunology Branch, National Cancer Institute, and National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892;
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720; and
Immunology Research Division, Department of Pathology, Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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More recently, costimulation has been studied in genetically engineered mice, including mice rendered deficient in CD28 (8), CTLA-4 (9, 10), B7-1, and/or B7-2 by homologous recombination (11). T cell differentiation appears to be normal in CD28-deficient mice, but mature T cells are functionally impaired, proliferating poorly in vitro in response to allogeneic cells, and failing to respond to costimulation by B7-expressing cells, indicating that CD28 is the primary costimulatory receptor in these responses (8). CTLA-4-deficient mice display a contrasting and striking phenotype, marked by profound in vivo lymphoproliferation with early lethality, indicating that CTLA-4 normally acts as a negative regulator of T cell activation (9, 10). Studies of mice rendered deficient in B7-1 and B7-2 have indicated an essential role for B7 costimulation in responses, including Ig class switching and germinal center formation (11). Transgenic mice overexpressing B7-1 or B7-2 have also been generated as probes for the in vivo function of these costimulatory ligands. Constitutive expression of B7-1 or B7-2 transgenes on B and T cells resulted in decreased B cell numbers in the periphery and a lower B cell precursor frequency in bone marrow, an effect that was T cell mediated and CD28 dependent (12, 13, 14). Defects in T cell-dependent B cell function were also identified in transgenic (Tg)2 mice constitutively expressing B7-1 on B cells (12, 14).
In contrast to the strong consensus of data indicating a critical role for CD28-B7 costimulatory signaling in Ag-specific activation of mature T cells, the role of B7-CD28 interaction in thymic and post-thymic T cell development and homeostasis is less clear. CD28 is normally expressed on essentially all murine thymocytes, and B7-1 and B7-2 are also expressed in thymus, notably on dendritic and medullary epithelial cells, consistent with a possible role of CD28-B7 interaction in thymic development. Punt et al., in fact, observed that Ab cross-linking of surface CD28 significantly increased apoptotic death induced in thymic CD4+CD8+ cells by anti-CD3, suggesting that CD28 signaling might play a role in regulating negative selection in this population (15, 16). Consistent with a role for CD28 in thymic negative selection, Noel and co-workers reported that CD28-deficient mice have increased numbers of thymocytes and that these cells are resistant to anti-CD3-induced deletion in vivo (17). A possible role in thymic selection for another B7 receptor, CTLA-4, was suggested by Cilio et al. (18), who reported that anti-CTLA-4 can prevent anti-CD3-induced thymocyte deletion. In contrast, other studies of Ab-induced negative selection and of CD28-deficient mice have concluded that B7 costimulation is not required for TCR-mediated deletion of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes (19, 20).
To further analyze the role of B7-dependent interactions in T cell homeostasis we have analyzed the effects of B7-1 and B7-2 Tg overexpression or B7-1/B7-2 deletion on CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations. Alterations of B7 expression were found to have profound effects on homeostasis of thymic and peripheral CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, indicating a substantial functional role of interactions between B7 and CD28/CTLA-4 costimulatory receptors in regulation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell differentiation and homeostasis.
| Materials and Methods |
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Anti-B7-2 Ab (GL1) was prepared in this laboratory (3). Anti-CD4, CD8, B220, CD28, CTLA-4, B7-1, CD45.1 (Ly5.2), CD25, CD69, and TCR Vß Abs were purchased from PharMingen (San Diego, CA)
Mice
BALB/c, C57BL/6 (B6), and congenic B6 Ly5.2 mice were obtained from Frederick Cancer Research Facility (Frederick, MD) and were maintained at Bioqual (Rockville, MD). All mice were used at 612 wk of age. B7-2 (line 7), B7-1T, and B7-1B Tg lines were previously characterized (12, 13, 14). CD28-/- mice on a B6 genetic background were generated by backcrossing CD28-/- mice (8) to B6 for five generations. Do11.10 TCR Tg mice were generated and bred on a BALB/c background by Murphy et al. (21) and maintained at Bioqual. All B7 Tg mice were maintained by successive backcross to B6 mice for at least six generations, and transgene-negative littermates were employed as controls in all experiments. Mice rendered deficient in both B7-1 and B7-2 by homologous recombination were previously described and were maintained after backcrossing to a BALB/c background (11).
Flow cytometric analysis
Single-cell suspensions were prepared from thymus, spleen, and brachial, axillary, and inguinal lymph nodes, and erythrocytes were removed by treatment with ACK lysing buffer (BioFluid, Rockville, MD). Anti-FcR mAb 24G2 was added to prevent FcR-mediated binding of mAb to the cells, and cells were then incubated with FITC-labeled mAb, biotinylated mAb, PE-labeled mAb, and streptavidin-Cy-Chrome conjugate (PharMingen) sequentially. For cytoplasmic staining of CTLA-4, cells were first stained for cell surface markers as described above. Cells were then fixed and permeabilized using Cytofix/Cytoperm solution (PharMingen), washed in Perm/Wash (PharMingen), and incubated with anti-CTLA-4-PE Ab (PharMingen). Viable cells (25 x 104) were analyzed by FACScan (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA) as previously described (22).
Northern blot analysis
Total RNA was isolated from lymphocytes using the Qiagen (Santa Clarita, CA) RNeasy kit and separated on 1.2% agarose gels. RNA was transferred onto nylon membranes (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) with 20x SSC using a turbo transfer apparatus (Schleicher & Schuell) and was UV cross-linked to membranes. Membranes were prehybridized with Quick-Hyb (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) for 60 min at 65°C. A full-length CD28 cDNA probe (provided by Dr. Philip Lucas, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD) was random primer labeled. After 2-h hybridization at 65°C, membranes were washed twice with 2x SSC/0.1% SDS and once with 0.1x SSC/0.1% SDS at 60°C. Membranes were stripped by boiling in 0.5% SDS solution, washed, and reprobed with a labeled actin probe (cDNA amplified using PCR primer pairs purchased from CLONTECH, Palo Alto, CA).
Mixed bone marrow chimeras
Radiation bone marrow chimeras were prepared as previously described (23). Recipient mice were lethally irradiated with 1000 rad and reconstituted with 107 T-depleted bone marrow cells. Analysis of chimeras was performed 5 wk after reconstitution.
| Results |
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Three lines of B7 transgenic mice were used to assess the effect
of B7 expression on T cell homeostasis. B7-2 line 7 expresses mouse
B7-2 under the control of the H-2Kb promoter and
Ig µ-chain enhancer (13). Consistent with previous
characterization, cell surface B7-2 expression in line 7 was detected
on peripheral B cells, T cells, and thymocytes, with T cells exhibiting
stronger B7-2 staining than B cells (Fig. 1
) and equivalent expression on
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells (data
not shown). Both B7-1T and B7-1B Tg lines express B7-1 under the
control of Ig µ enhancer and promoter elements (12). In
B7-1T Tg mice, B7-1 was expressed in thymus and on peripheral T cells,
but not on B cells (Fig. 1
). In B7-1B Tg mice, B7-1 was expressed on
peripheral B cells, but not on peripheral T cells, with a low level of
B7-1 detected on B7-1B thymocytes (Fig. 1
). Non-Tg littermates express
little B7-1 or B7-2 in thymus and express a low level of B7-2 on spleen
T cells.
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The effect of Tg B7 overexpression on T cell development and
differentiation was analyzed in thymus, spleen, and peripheral lymph
nodes from Tg and non-Tg littermates. When B7-2 Tg and non-Tg B6
littermates were compared, a significant peripheral lymphocyte
expansion was observed in B7-2 Tg spleen and peripheral lymph nodes,
with the number of splenocytes increased by >40% and lymph node cells
increased >6-fold over littermate controls (Fig. 2
A). When B7-2 Tg mice were
analyzed on a (BALB/c x B6)F1 background, a
more profound peripheral lymphocyte expansion was seen in both spleen
and lymph nodes, with the number of splenocytes increased >200% and
lymph node cells increased >10-fold over littermate controls (Fig. 2
A). The number of thymocytes was not significantly
different in Tg and control mice (data not shown). Thus, B7-2 transgene
expression results in striking hyperplasia of peripheral lymphoid
organs, and the genetic background (B6 vs (BALB x
B6)F1) appears to affect the magnitude of this
lymphoid expansion. In B7-2 Tg spleen, there were consistent changes in
cellular composition, including a decreased proportion of B cells and
increases in T cells and non-T/non-B cells (Fig. 2
B). In
addition to increased cell numbers in secondary lymphoid organs such as
spleen and lymph node, B7-2 Tg mice exhibited extensive lymphoid
infiltration of organs, including lung and liver (data not shown).
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CD4/CD8 ratios are skewed in B7 Tg mice
To determine the effects of B7 overexpression on
CD4+ and CD8+ T cell
differentiation and homeostasis, thymic and peripheral T cell
populations were analyzed. A small, but statistically significant,
increase in the percentage of CD8 single positive thymocytes and a
similarly small but significant decrease in CD4 single-positive
thymocytes was observed in B7-2 Tg mice compared with
transgene-negative littermates (Table I
). This pattern was best
illustrated by comparison of CD4/CD8 ratios (percentage of
CD4+CD8-/percentage of
CD4-CD8+) as shown in Fig. 3
A. In B7-2 Tg as well as
B7-1T Tg lines, thymic CD4/CD8 ratios were significantly lower than
those of transgene-negative littermates.
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B7-induced lymphoid hyperplasia and CD8 skewing are CD28 dependent
One pathway through which B7 overexpression might lead to
peripheral lymphocyte expansion is the engagement of CD28. To determine
whether CD28 is required for lymphocyte expansion in B7-2 Tg mice, the
effect of B7-2 transgene expression was assessed in CD28-deficient
mice. In contrast to B7-2 Tg mice with wild-type CD28 expression, there
was no lymphocyte expansion observed in
B7-2Tg+CD28-/- mice (data
not shown). CD4/CD8 T cell ratios were not skewed toward
CD8+ T cells in either thymus or periphery (Fig. 3
B). Thus, both lymphocyte expansion and CD8 skewing
observed in B7-2 Tg mice appear to be dependent on CD28/B7-2
interaction.
B7-induced lymphoid hyperplasia is influenced by TCR expression
To determine whether TCR signaling plays a role in B7-2-induced lymphocyte expansion, the B7-2 transgene was expressed in mice that also express the Do11.10 TCR transgene specific for OVA peptide. Do11 TCR Tg thymocytes are positively selected and differentiate into mature T cells that are highly skewed toward CD4+ T cells (21), but it appears that peripheral T cells do not normally encounter a functional ligand and therefore maintain a naive phenotype (24). Heterozygous B7-2 Tg B6 mice were crossed with heterozygous Do11.10 TCR Tg BALB/c mice to generate (B6 x BALB/c)F1 mice that were double Tg (B7-2Tg+Do11+), single Tg (B7-2Tg+Do11- or B7-2Tg-Do11+), or non-Tg (B7-2Tg-Do11-).
Significant lymphocyte expansion was observed in mice expressing only
the B7-2 Tg (B7-2Tg+Do11-)
as documented by total cell yield of spleen (almost 3-fold increase)
and lymph nodes (>10-fold increase; Fig. 4
A). In contrast, mice
expressing both Do11 TCR and B7-2 transgenes
(B7-2Tg+Do11+) showed
significantly less expansion in spleen and no expansion in lymph node
cell number. Mice expressing only the Do11 TCR Tg did not exhibit
lymphocyte expansion over non-Tg controls. Taken together, these
results indicate that lymphocyte expansion in B7-2 Tg mice is dependent
upon TCR expression and is absent or diminished in mice with apparently
reduced TCR signaling mediated by the OVA-specific Do11.10 TCR
transgene.
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Because lymphocyte expansion was observed in
B7-2TG+Do11- but not in
B7-2Tg+Do11+ double-Tg
mice, we determined the activation status as reflected by the
expression of early lymphocyte activation markers CD25 and CD69 in
these animals. In parallel to lymphocyte expansion, only
B7-2Tg+Do11- mice had
substantially increased percentages of T cells expressing CD25 compared
with B7-2Tg+Do11+
double-Tg, Do11+ Tg, or wild-type non-Tg mice.
B7-2Tg+Do11- peripheral
lymphocytes were also large, as judged by forward light scatter (data
not shown). In contrast, both
B7-2Tg+Do11- and
B7-2Tg+Do11+ had increased
proportions of CD69+ cells (Fig. 4
B).
These observations suggest that B7-CD28 interaction alone or in
combination with reduced or absent TCR signaling can induce some early
activation responses, such as expression of CD69, but cannot induce
other in vivo activation events, including CD25 expression and T cell
hyperplasia.
Surface CD28 down-regulation in B7 Tg mice
We next studied the effect of B7 transgenes on the expression of
the B7 receptor CD28 in thymus and periphery. In B7-1T and B7-2 Tg
lines, in which all thymocytes express a high level of B7-1 or
B7-2, surface expression of CD28 on thymic lymphocytes was markedly
down-regulated (Fig. 5
). In B7-1B mice,
in which B7-1 is expressed at a low level on thymocytes, little, if
any, reduction of cell surface CD28 expression was observed. In the
periphery of B7-2 Tg, which express B7-2 on both T and B cells, CD28
expression was modestly, but consistently, reduced on
CD4+ cells, but not on CD8+
cells. B7-1T Tg animals exhibited down-regulation of cell surface CD28
on both CD4+ and CD8+ T
cells, whereas B7-1B Tg mice displayed little change in surface CD28
expression in thymus or periphery.
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The observed down-regulation of cell surface CD28 expression could
represent the consequence of B7 transgene expression by the same cells,
e.g., by intracellular interaction of B7 and CD28, or alternatively
might result from interaction of cell surface CD28 with cell surface B7
transgene products on other cells. To further probe these
possibilities, mixed radiation bone marrow chimeras were made by
reconstituting lethally irradiated B6 recipients with a mixture of bone
marrow cells from B7-2 Tg and non-Tg B6 Ly5.2 congenic mice. The
lymphocyte populations were analyzed by flow cytometry 1 mo after
reconstitution. In these chimeras, cell autonomous effects would be
observed only in transgene-expressing cells, whereas changes that
affect both Tg and non-Tg cells would reflect nonautonomous processes.
All chimeras showed a balanced repopulation of T lymphocytes from B7 Tg
(Ly5.1) and non-Tg Ly5.2 stem cells. In these chimeras, cell surface
CD28 was profoundly and comparably down-regulated on both
transgene-positive and transgene-negative Ly5.2 cells (Fig. 6
A), this down-regulation
affecting CD4-CD8-,
CD4+CD8+,
CD4+CD8-, and
CD4-CD8+ subpopulations
(data not shown). The observed CD28 down-regulation on B7
transgene-negative thymocytes demonstrated that cell surface CD28 can
be regulated through intercellular interaction with its B7 ligand.
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CTLA-4 expression in B7 Tg mice
The expression of CTLA-4 (CD152), the second known receptor for
B7-1 and B7-2, was also analyzed in wild-type and B7-2 Tg mice.
Consistent with previous studies, freshly explanted thymocytes from
wild-type mice expressed no detectable cell surface or cytoplasmic
CTLA-4, and B7-2 Tg thymocytes similarly did not express CTLA-4 (data
not shown). Freshly explanted spleen T cells from both wild-type and
B7-2 Tg mice were negative for surface CTLA-4 expression, and surface
expression was induced equivalently on transgene-negative and
transgene-positive T cells by in vitro activation (data not
shown). In contrast, a significant difference between wild-type and
B7-2 Tg mice was observed in cytoplasmic CTLA-4 expression by freshly
explanted spleen T cells: 51.6% of B7-2 Tg CD4+
cells vs 22.5% of wild-type CD4+ cells, and
32.2% of B7-2 Tg CD8+ cells vs 5.2% of
wild-type CD8+ cells were cytoplasmic CTLA-4
positive (Fig. 7
). Thus, the B7-2
transgene results in markedly increased expression of cytoplasmic
CTLA-4 expression by both CD4+ and
CD8+ T cells. To determine whether cytoplasmic
CTLA-4 expression is related to activation state of T cells, T cell
subpopulations that are either positive or negative for the activation
Ags CD25 or CD69 were analyzed. It was found that cytoplasmic CTLA-4 is
preferentially expressed on CD25+ and
CD69+ (activated) and on
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in
both B7-2 Tg and non-Tg populations (data not shown).
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The peripheral T cell expansion observed in B7-2Tg mice could be the result of oligoclonal or polyclonal expansion. When the TCR repertoire was assessed by analysis of Vß expression in B7-2Tg mice, no significant change in TCR Vß profile was observed in CD4 or CD8 single-positive thymocytes or splenic T cells (data not shown), with the exception of a modest, but significantly increased, proportion of Vß5+ cells in both CD8+ single-positive thymocytes (12.2 ± 1.6% Vß5+ in B7-2Tg+ and 8.6 ± 1.9% Vß5+ in Tg-; p < 0.05) and CD4+ spleen T cells (5.3 ± 0.5% Vß5+ in B7-2Tg+ and 3.3 ± 0.5% Vß5+ in B7-2Tg-; p < 0.01). When TCR Vß expression was assessed on activated (CD69+ or CD25+) T cells, the population of activated B7-2 Tg T cells was also found to be broadly polyclonal (data not shown). T cell hyperplasia in B7-2 Tg mice is thus polyclonal and without gross distortion of the TCR Vß repertoire.
CD4/CD8 homeostasis in B7-1/B7-2-deficient mice
If the effects of Tg B7 overexpression reflect an exaggeration of
normal B7 function, it might be expected that a deficiency in B7
expression would have reciprocal effects. To test this hypothesis, T
cell development was analyzed in mice that were rendered deficient in
both B7-1 and B7-2 by homologous recombination. Peripheral T cells from
B7-1/B7-2-deficient BALB/c and control mice were first analyzed. No
significant differences were found in total cellularity of spleen and
lymph nodes from deficient and control animals (data not shown).
However, CD4/CD8 ratios in B7-1/B7-2-deficient mice were markedly
increased in both spleen (4.1 ± 0.5 in B7-deficient mice,
2.2 ± 0.2 in controls) and lymph nodes (6.6 ± 0.6 in
B7-deficient mice, 2.8 ± 0.2 in controls; Fig. 8
); these differences were reciprocal to
the decreased CD4/CD8 ratios observed in B7-overexpressing Tg mice. In
thymus, total cell number was not different in B7-deficient and
wild-type mice, but there were significant differences in the relative
proportions of thymocyte subpopulations. The percentage of
CD4+CD8+ cells was
significantly lower in B7-deficient mice (74.3 vs 83.8%;
p < 0.03), whereas the percentage of
CD4+ single-positive cells was higher in
B7-deficient mice (17.2 vs 10.5%; p < 0.01); the
ratio between CD4 and CD8 single-positive thymocytes tended to be
higher in B7-deficient mice than in controls (6.0 in B7 deficient vs
4.2 in controls), although this difference was not statistically
significant (p = 0.09) for the number of mice
analyzed to date. When CD4/CD8 ratios were measured in B7-1 or B7-2
single-deficient mice, no skewed ratios were observed over those in
littermate controls (data not shown). Taken together, the reciprocal
effects of B7 overexpression and B7 deficiency strongly suggest that B7
plays a substantial physiologic role in regulating the development and
homeostasis of mature CD4+ and
CD8+ T cells.
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Studies of B7 Tg mice indicated that B7-1 or B7-2 overexpression
results in down-regulation of cell surface CD28. To determine whether
CD28-B7 interaction also plays a role in regulating CD28 expression
under conditions of physiologic B7 expression, the effect of B7
deficiency on CD28 expression was examined. CD28 density on thymocytes
from B7-1/B7-2-deficient mice was substantially increased over the
levels of expression in control mice (Fig. 9
A). This CD28 up-regulation
occurred in CD4-8-,
CD4+8+,
CD4+8-, and
CD4-8+ thymocytes,
suggesting that CD28 on each of these populations is normally modulated
by B7 ligation (Fig. 9
B). On peripheral splenic T cells,
CD28 expression was also increased consistently on
CD4+ T cells and to a lesser extent on
CD8+ T cells from B7-1/B7-2-deficient mice (data
not shown). These changes were again the reciprocal of those observed
in B7-Tg and suggest that physiologic expression of B7 normally
mediates a significant degree of CD28 down-regulation in both thymus
and peripheral T cells.
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| Discussion |
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The observed effects of B7 expression on CD4 and CD8 lineages may be mediated at both thymic and post-thymic levels. In the thymus, commitment of precursors to the CD4 and CD8 lineages is determined by interaction between TCR complexes on thymocytes and Ag-presenting MHC class I or class II molecules expressed on thymic epithelial cells. In this regard, it is of interest that the TCR Vß repertoire is not substantially different in B7-Tg and non-Tg mice, failing to identify altered TCR specificity as a mediator of altered CD4 and CD8 development or expansion. Expression of MHC class I and class II products, also capable of influencing CD4+ and CD8+ T cell development, was similarly unaltered in B7 Tg or -deficient mice (data not shown).
Interestingly, Tg mice expressing Bcl-2 or Notch IC have been reported to display an increase in the proportion of CD8 single-positive thymocytes similar to that observed in B7 Tg (25, 26, 27). The effect of Bcl-2 and Notch on CD4/CD8 lineage commitment may be related to the anti-apoptotic function of these two molecules on thymocytes (25, 28, 29, 30). Itano et al. (31) and Matechak et al. (32) postulated that relatively weak signaling through the TCR of CD4+8+ precursors favors CD8 lineage commitment. In the context of this model, cells that would normally die by neglect because of the extremely low affinity of TCR for available self-Ag/MHC complexes may be rescued preferentially by anti-apoptotic signaling enhanced by Bcl-2 and Notch transgenes (30), favoring increased survival of cells committed to the CD8 lineage. The fact that B7-CD28 interaction can enhance T cell survival through the induction of anti-apoptotic genes such as bcl-xL (33) and the observation that Bcl-2 is up-regulated during normal thymic development (26, 34) suggest that in B7 Tg mice, increased signaling through CD28 may affect CD4/CD8 lineage commitment by preferential Bcl-2-mediated rescue of CD8-committed thymocytes that would normally undergo death by neglect. In the absence of B7-CD28 signaling as seen in B7-1/B7-2-deficient thymus, physiologic levels of this rescue would not occur, resulting in decreased CD8 lineage commitment and favoring dominance of CD4.
Although a similar CD8 skewing phenotype is observed in the thymus of Bcl-2 Tg and B7 Tg mice, there are marked differences in the peripheral T cell populations of these two Tg models. In Bcl-2 Tg mice CD8 skewing is limited to the thymus and is not accompanied by increased export or peripheral expansion of CD8+ cells. In contrast, in B7 Tg mice CD8 skewing is observed in both thymus and periphery, accompanied by a striking peripheral lymphoid hyperplasia in B7-2 Tg. These differences may reflect the difference in tissue distribution of transgene expression in these two models, thymic restricted in the case of Bcl-2 driven by the proximal Lck promoter and more widely T and/or B cell expressed in the case of B7-1 and B7-2 Tg. It is also possible that B7 interactions with CD28 and/or CTLA-4 induce signaling events distinct from or in addition to those mediated by Bcl-2 or Notch.
In the periphery, transgene-mediated overexpression of either B7-1 or
B7-2 resulted in CD28-dependent skewing toward
CD8+ T cells, with a shift in peripheral CD4/CD8
ratio from
2 in spleens of non-Tg mice to 0.5 in B7-2 Tg. It is
notable that the degree of skewing observed in peripheral T cells is
consistently greater than that observed in the thymus, suggesting the
importance of peripheral factors in this altered homeostasis.
Deficiency in B7-1 and B7-2 resulted in a reciprocal skewing toward
CD4+ cells and alteration of CD4/CD8 ratio from 2
in control spleen to 4 in B7-deficient spleen. Genetically engineered
overexpression and deficiency in B7 expression are thus capable of
modulating the proportion of CD4+ and
CD8+ peripheral T cells over approximately an
8-fold range. Moreover, the fact that either an increase or a decrease
in B7 expression leads to altered CD4/CD8 ratios strongly suggests that
B7 plays a role in determination of CD4/CD8 homeostasis under
physiologic conditions. Peripheral lymphoid hyperplasia was most marked
in B7-2 Tg (B6 x BALB/c)F1 mice, in which
spleen cell numbers were 3-fold and lymph node numbers were 10-fold
those in non-Tg controls. Hyperplasia reflected increased numbers of
both T and non-T cells, and T cell expansion was polyclonal. When
expressed in absolute cell numbers, the expansion of peripheral
CD8+ cells is striking, with
CD8+ cells in spleen and lymph nodes from B7-2Tg
mice increased as much as 4- and 15-fold, respectively. In addition to
increased cell numbers in secondary lymphoid organs, B7-2 Tg mice
exhibited abnormal lymphoid infiltration of organs, including liver and
lung. Increased cell size and increased expression of CD25 and CD69 on
Tg CD4+ and CD8+ T cells
are consistent with extensive peripheral activation. Peripheral
lymphoid expansion required CD28 and appeared to be TCR dependent as
well, as reflected in the minimal lymphocyte expansion seen in TCR
transgene-expressing Do11+ B7-2 Tg mice. It thus
appears that increased CD28 signaling by overexpressed Tg B7 together
with physiologic levels of TCR signaling by ligands encountered in the
periphery, results in abnormal T cell activation and expansion.
Expression of either the B7-1 or B7-2 transgene had a similar effect in
skewing the proportion of CD8+ T cells,
indicating a similarity of B7-1 and B7-2 in this functional capacity.
In contrast, marked overall lymphoid hyperplasia was observed only in
B7-2 line 7 Tg. It is unclear whether this reflects a functional
difference between B7-1 and B7-2 or a difference in quantitative
expression or tissue distribution of Tg B7 products in these lines. The
overall kinetics of cell division and cell death that contribute to the
observed net T cell hyperplasia remain to be elucidated. It is of
interest, however, that in preliminary studies, the proportion of
apoptotic cells detected by either TUNEL or annexin staining is
substantially greater in freshly harvested B7-2 Tg T cells than in
littermate controls, indicating that expanded numbers of peripheral T
cells are sustained in B7-2 Tg even in the face of increased cell death
(data not shown).
An interesting consequence of altered B7 expression was its effect on cell surface CD28 on thymic and peripheral T cells. Transgenic overexpression of either B7-1 or B7-2 resulted in substantially decreased cell surface CD28 on thymocytes and on CD4+ and CD8+ peripheral T cells. The observed reciprocal increase in CD28 expression in thymic and peripheral T cells from B7-deficient mice strongly suggests that expression of CD28 under physiologic conditions in wild-type mice is influenced by B7 engagement, possibly through receptor internalization or shedding. CD28 down-regulation in B7 Tg mice as well as CD28 up-regulation in B7-1/B7-2-deficient mice were observed in CD4-8-, CD4+8+, CD4+8-, and CD4-8+ thymocyte populations, suggesting that CD28 on each of these populations is modulated by B7 ligation. Modulation of cell surface CD28 appeared to be mediated by intercellular interaction of CD28-expressing T cells with B7-1- or B7-2-expressing cells. In principle, this regulation of CD28 might serve as a compensatory mechanism to moderate the delivery of excessive CD28 costimulatory signals generated during thymic development and peripheral immune responses. However, the observed thymic and peripheral CD8 skewing together with the lymphoid hyperplasia and infiltration observed in B7-2 Tg mice indicate the limited efficacy of any compensatory mechanism mediated by CD28 down-regulation. Expression of the other known B7 receptor, CTLA-4, was also influenced by B7 transgene expression. Neither wild-type nor Tg T cells expressed detectable cell surface CTLA-4 unless activated in vitro. Cytoplasmic CTLA-4 was detected, however, and levels of expression were consistently greater in both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from B7-2 Tg mice than in wild-type T cells. The higher levels of cytoplasmic CTLA-4 observed in B7-2 Tg T cells may reflect the increased activation state of these T cells. The functional implications of increased cytoplasmic CTLA-4 are not clear in the absence of detectable cell surface expression. It is possible that upon in vivo activation, B7-2 Tg T cells are capable of rapid transport of CTLA-4 to the cell surface, where CTLA-4-mediated signaling could contribute to preferential down-regulation of CD4+ T cell activation and the observed skewing toward CD8+ cells in these mice.
The findings reported here suggest a central role for B7-dependent signaling in regulating the development and homeostasis of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, a role that is potentially mediated through the costimulatory receptors CD28 and CTLA-4. The observed CD8+ T cell skewing and expansion in B7Tg mice and the CD4+ T cell skewing in B7-deficient mice demonstrate that B7 expression can substantially influence the balance between CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. The fact that B7-dependent CD8 skewing and lymphoid expansion do not occur in B7-2Tg CD28-/- mice indicates that B7-2 interaction with the CD28 costimulatory receptor mediates these effects in the presence of transgenically increased B7 expression. The observation that CD28-deficient mice expressing physiologic levels of B7 display normal CD4/CD8 ratios and peripheral homeostasis (Ref. 8 and this study; data not shown) suggest that CD28 may not play an equivalent role in CD4/CD8 T cell homeostasis under all conditions of B7 expression. It has recently been reported that B7-dependent interactions with another receptor, CTLA-4, play an important role in T cell activation and proliferation. CTLA-4-deficient mice appear to undergo normal thymic development (35), but express a phenotype of profound peripheral lymphoproliferation in which CD4+ T cell expansion predominates, with enlarged lymphoid organs, an activated T cell phenotype, and extensive lymphoid infiltration of multiple organs, resulting in early death (9, 10). From these and other results, it has been concluded that CTLA-4 serves as a receptor that functions to negatively regulate T cell activation. The in vivo consequences of CTLA-4 deficiency are B7 dependent, suggesting that the lymphocyte expansion is mediated by B7 interactions with a receptor other than CTLA-4, probably with CD28 (36). The lymphoproliferative CTLA-4-deficient phenotype is also dependent upon TCR signaling and is prevented by expression of the same Do11.10 transgene that was demonstrated here to prevent the lymphoproliferation and CD8 skewing induced by B7-2 transgene expression.
Taken together, these results suggest that B7-dependent signaling acts
through CD28 and CTLA-4 receptors to play a critical role in T cell
homeostasis (Fig. 10
). The overall
effect of B7 costimulation is determined by interactions between B7 and
two known receptors, CD28 and CTLA-4. The extensive expansion of
CD4+ T cells that occurs in CTLA-4-deficient mice
at physiologic levels of B7 and TCR signaling suggests that CTLA-4
preferentially inhibits activation and expansion of
CD4+ cells under these conditions. The findings
reported here suggest that CD28 signaling favors
CD8+ T cell expansion, as reflected in the
preferential CD28-dependent expansion of CD8+
cells in B7 Tg mice as well as the decreased proportion and absolute
number of CD8+ T cells in B7-deficient mice.
Relative to B7-deficient mice, both wild-type and Tg mice have a
decreased CD4/CD8 ratio, and this effect is quantitatively greater in
overexpressing B7 Tg mice, indicating that the CD4/CD8 ratio is
inversely related to the quantitative level of expressed B7.
Importantly, all these effects are strongly influenced by TCR
expression, suggesting that the consequences of altered costimulatory
signaling reflect the pre-existing activation state of a cell and the
strength of its TCR signaling. The preferential effect of CD28
signaling on CD8+ commitment and expansion
identified in the present studies suggests that
CD4+ and CD8+ T cells
differ, on the average, in their activation thresholds or in the
strength of ambient TCR-mediated signaling of these populations under
physiologic conditions.
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| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Abbreviations used in this paper: Tg, transgenic; B6, C57BL/6; BALB, BALB/c; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity. ![]()
Received for publication September 2, 1999. Accepted for publication January 24, 2000.
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