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*
Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, Center for Neurologic Diseases, Brigham and Womens Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115; and
Department of Pediatric Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA 02115
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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In vitro studies have established that rapamycin inhibits the proliferation of many mammalian cells, with particular sensitivity to hemopoietic and lymphoid cells (reviewed in Refs. 3, 4). This inhibition of proliferation occurs at a later stage of cellular activation as compared with inhibition by cyclosporin A and FK506, which inhibit calcineurin or calcineurin-dependent transcriptional activation of lymphokine genes (10) (reviewed in Refs. 11, 12). Specifically, rapamycin inhibits growth factor signaling rather than growth factor synthesis (reviewed in Ref. 3). FKBP12 is the intracellular binding protein for both rapamycin and FK506 (13, 14). The rapamycin/FKBP complex acts to inhibit the activity of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)3 (15), also known as RAFT1 (rapamycin and FKBP12 target) (16), FRAP (FKBP and rapamycin-associated protein) (17), and RAPT (rapamycin target) (18). mTOR is a member of the lipid kinase family, with homology to phosphatidylinositol-3 lipid kinases (19). mTOR activity is upstream of p70s6 kinase activity (20). p70S6k regulates the translational process by phosphorylating the 40S ribosomal subunit S6, thereby promoting translation. Treatment with rapamycin has been shown to abrogate p70s6k activity (21, 22).
Despite promising results in clinical trials, little is known regarding the effects of rapamycin on human CD8+ T cells. This is particularly relevant given the well-established role of CD8+ T cells in graft rejection (reviewed in Ref. 23). Moreover, an expanding literature is beginning to address the structural basis of T cell activation at a new level of resolution. The formation of the immunological synapse between the APC and the T cell is a complex event influenced by both the Ag-specific interaction and critical contributions of coreceptors (24, 25). Little if anything is known regarding the crucial details involved in the formation of the immune synapse by CD8+ T cells, and even less about the effects of rapamycin on the outcome of this encounter. What has become clear is that the strength of signal delivered through the TCR is a major determinant of T cell effector function and that varying the strength of signal, as with altered peptide ligand, can produce functionally different outcomes (reviewed in Refs. 26, 27). As transplantation in humans may be a close approximation to in vitro studies with altered peptide ligand, it is important to understand how rapamycin affects T cell activation depending upon the nature of the antigenic signal.
In this study, we examined the effects of rapamycin on the activation of human CD8+ T cells. Our studies show that proliferation of CD8+ T cells can be resistant to inhibition by rapamycin. This is true for both CD8+ primary T cells as well as for a subset of CD8+ human T cell clones. Rapamycin-resistant proliferation of the CD8+ T cell clones can be blocked by anti-IL-2 Abs, suggesting that while some of the parallel pathways triggered by IL-2R signaling are sensitive to the effects of rapamycin, others account for the Ag-driven rapamycin resistance. These data provide a new framework for examining rapamycins specific mechanism of action in the treatment of human disease.
| Materials and Methods |
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Lymphocytes were isolated from the whole blood of normal donors following platelet pheresis by centrifugation through Ficoll-Paque (Amersham, Uppsala, Switzerland) and plastic adherence. CD8+ T cells were positively selected following incubation with anti-human CD8 microbeads using the Dynabead magnetic cell separation system (Dynal, Lake Success, NY). Purified CD8+ T cells were rested overnight at 37°C before use. CD8+ T cells were cultured at 37°C with 5% CO2 in RPMI 1640 (BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD) with 10% heat-inactivated FCS (Irvine Scientific, Santa Ana, CA), 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 10 mM HEPES, and 2 mM L-glutamine (all obtained from BioWhittaker). CD8+ human T cell clones reactive to human T cell leukemia virus-1 (HTLV-1) peptide Tax1119 were generated as described and have been extensively characterized functionally elsewhere (28). Briefly, CD8+/HLA-A*0201/Tax1119 tetramer-positive T cells were isolated from the peripheral blood of an HLA-A*0201-expressing patient with typical HTLV-1 myelopathy and single cell cloned. All of the tetramer-binding T cells that were expanded in vitro proliferated in response to stimulation by HLA-A*0201/LFA-3-expressing Chinese hamster ovary cells loaded with Tax1119 peptide. For use in experiments, T cell clones were thawed, restimulated with PHA plus irradiated mononuclear cells, and expanded in RPMI 1640 containing 10% heat-inactivated pooled human serum (Omega Scientific, Tarzana, CA), 10% T-stim (Collaborative Biomedicine Products, Bedford, MA), 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 10 mM HEPES, and 2 mM L-glutamine (all obtained from BioWhittaker). The generation of the EBV-transformed B cell lines DAH (HLA-A*A0205+) and KSB (HLA-A*0201+) has been described (28).
Antibodies
The murine anti-human CD28 mAb 3D10 (generous gift of Mary Colling, Genetics Institute, Cambridge, MA), the murine anti-human CD3 mAb OKT3 (American Type Culture Collection (ATCC), Manassas, VA), the anti-human OKT8D mAb (ATCC), and the anti-human CD2 OKT11 (ATCC) were purified from ascites. The anti-p70s6k polyclonal Ab was purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa Cruz, CA). The neutralizing anti-human IL-15 and the anti-human IL-2 were purchased from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN).
Proliferation assay
Cells were pretreated with rapamycin or ethanol (vehicle control) for 30 min to 2 h before use in proliferation assays. EBV-transformed B cells or transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells were irradiated with 5000 rad or treated with mitomycin C (100 µg/ml for 2 h), respectively, pulsed with the peptide or PBS control for 2 h at 37°C, and washed twice to remove free peptide. Plates were seeded with 2 x 104 APCs per well. For Ab stimulations, plates were coated with anti-CD3, or with anti-CD3 plus either anti-CD28, anti-CD8, or anti-CD2, as indicated, at 37°C for at least 2 h, then washed five times with twice the volume of PBS to remove free Ab before use. T cells were plated in 96-well round-bottom plates (Costar, Cambridge, MA) at 105/well (in triplicate) in a final volume of 200 µl and cultured for 72 h. Proliferation was assessed by the incorporation of [3H]thymidine (NEN, Boston, MA), after harvest (Tomtec, Orange, CT) following an 18-h pulse. Incorporation was measured using a liquid scintillation counter (Wallace, Gaithersburg, MD).
Immunoprecipitations and Western blots
Human purified CD8+ T cells or CD8+ T cell clones were washed, resuspended in RPMI 1640, incubated on ice for 15 min with either APCs or Ab (as indicated), and warmed to 37°C for the time indicated. The cells were washed twice with cold RPMI containing 1 µM sodium orthovanadate (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and lysed for 15 min on ice in cold lysis buffer (1% Nonidet P-40, 150 mM NaCl, 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 1 µM sodium orthovanadate, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, and 10 µg/ml aprotinin). Detergent extracts were clarified by centrifugation at 14,000 x g for 10 min at 4°C. The resulting supernatants were harvested and either used for immunoprecipitations or separated by electrophoresis through 8% SDS-PAGE (Protogel; National Diagnostics, Atlanta, GA). For immunoprecipitation, cellular extracts were incubated with the p70s6k antisera and 25 µl of protein A-agarose for at least 2 h at 4°C, after which the resin was washed three times with lysis buffer. Separated proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore, Bedford, MA), immunoblotted with the p70s6k Ab, and detected by ECL (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL) according to the manufacturers instructions.
| Results |
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A panel of Ag-specific CD8+ human T cell
clones was single cell cloned from the blood of an HTLV-1-infected
HLA-A*0201+ individual using an HLA-A*0201/HTLV-1
Tax1119 tetramer (28). CD8+ T cell
clones were pretreated with one of two doses of rapamycin or vehicle
control, followed by stimulation with PBS- or Tax peptide-pulsed
EBV-transformed B cells expressing HLA-A*0201 (KSB line). Antigenic
stimulation with either of two doses of Tax peptide induced
proliferation of all the clones, and rapamycin at both concentrations
inhibited the proliferation of four of the clones (Fig. 1
A). Surprisingly, the
proliferation of two clones (TP7 and TP60) was resistant to inhibition
by very high doses of rapamycin (1 and 10 µM, respectively) (Fig. 1
B). Thus, physiological stimulation of human
CD8+ T cells with cognate Ag presented by APCs
could result in proliferation resistant to very high doses of
rapamycin.
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Rapamycin affects the ability to progress through cell cycle, a
progression induced by a combination of signals through the TCR and
costimulators, as well as by cytokines secreted in response to
stimulation. It was of interest to determine the contribution of the
strength of stimulation through the TCR to rapamycin-resistant
proliferation. We took advantage of a previous observation that
CD8+ T cell clones recognizing the
HLA-A*0201/Tax1119 complex can be cross-reactive with the related
allogeneic HLA-A*0205 subtype pulsed with Tax1119 (D. G. Lim, K.
Bourcier, G. Buckle, G. Freeman, A. Sette, and D. A. Hafler,
manuscript in preparation). The CD8+ human T cell
clones TP7 and TP60 proliferate in response to HLA-A*0205 pulsed with
the Tax1119 peptide. However, stimulation of the clones with this MHC
altered peptide ligand results in quantitatively less thymidine
incorporation and is likely to be representative of a weaker signal
through the TCR. This model system was used to attenuate the strength
of antigenic stimulation to determine whether a weaker signal through
the TCR would be susceptible to inhibition by rapamycin. The human
CD8+ T cell clone TP60 was pretreated with either
10 µM rapamycin or vehicle control, followed by stimulation with
Tax1119-pulsed or nonpulsed EBV-transformed B cells expressing either
HLA-A*0201 (KSB line) or HLA-A*0205 (DAH line) (Fig. 2
A). Although HLA-A*0201 plus
Tax1119 stimulation resulted in rapamycin-resistant proliferation,
HLA-A*0205 plus Tax1119 resulted in proliferation that was completely
abrogated by rapamycin.
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Rapamycin-resistant proliferation of a human CD8+ T cell clone can be modeled by cross-linking CD3
High concentrations of cognate peptide Ag were capable of
inducing rapamycin-resistant proliferation of the T cell clones TP60
and TP7, whereas relatively low concentrations of the same peptide Ag
or peptide Ag presented by allogeneic MHC induced rapamycin-sensitive
proliferation of the same clones. This suggested a strict dependence on
specific signaling through the TCR, or a narrow window of antigenic
stimulation, required for rapamycin-resistant proliferation. We
examined whether resistance to rapamycin could be observed after TCR
cross-linking using different concentrations of immobilized
anti-CD3 mAb. The human CD8+ T cell clone
TP60 was pretreated either with vehicle control, or with 1, 10,
or 100 nM rapamycin, and then stimulated with increasing
concentrations of immobilized anti-CD3 mAb (Fig. 3
A). Concentrations of
immobilized anti-CD3 as low as 1 ng/ml induced proliferation of the
TP60, and at low concentrations of anti-CD3 (
100 ng/ml) proliferation
of the T cell clones was inhibited by rapamycin. However, at higher
concentrations of anti-CD3 (
1 µg/ml), proliferation was
resistant to inhibition by 100 nM rapamycin.
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The major clinical use of rapamycin is currently in the setting of
transplantation; therefore, we wanted to test the efficacy of rapamycin
at inhibiting a MLR, a surrogate, in vitro test for alloreactivity.
CD8+ T cells were pretreated with vehicle control
(filled symbols) or with 1 µM rapamycin (open symbols), then exposed
to one of two different irradiated EBV-transformed B cell lines (DAH
and KSB) at increasing concentrations (Fig. 3
C). The
CD8+ T cells responded to both EBV-transformed B
cell lines, albeit at a more robust level to KSB. Rapamycin
dramatically inhibited proliferation regardless of the allostimulation
(open symbols), demonstrating that, as expected, the alloresponse was
sensitive to inhibition by rapamycin.
Simultaneously cross-linking CD3 and CD28, but not CD2 or CD8, on human CD8+ T cells results in proliferation that is resistant to inhibition by rapamycin
The formation of the immunological synapse impacts upon the
outcome of Ag encounter and resulting effector function. Thus, it was
of interest to assess the relative contributions of major coreceptors
to rapamycin sensitivity/resistance, and determine which, if any, would
confer rapamycin resistance. CD28, given its pivotal role in
costimulation, was the first cell surface receptor we evaluated.
CD8+ peripheral blood T cells were pretreated
with either vehicle control, or with 1, 10, or 100 nM rapamycin, then
stimulated with increasing concentrations of plate-bound anti-CD3
mAb, in the presence of soluble anti-CD28 mAb at the indicated
concentrations (Fig. 4
A). As
expected, the costimulatory signal provided by the addition of 1 or 5
µg/ml soluble anti-CD28 mAb resulted in enhancement of
proliferation that was inhibited by rapamycin, with the exception of T
cell stimulation by 50 µg/ml anti-CD3 (Fig. 4
A). It
has been shown that different signals can be generated through CD28,
depending on the particular stimulation (CD80, CD86, or different mAbs)
(31, 32). In the absence of APCs, to deliver a signal
approximating that delivered in vivo, we simultaneously cross-linked
CD3 and CD28 with immobilized, as opposed to soluble, Abs (Fig. 4
B). This resulted in an increased sensitivity to
anti-CD3 mAb stimulation with a shift of the dose response to the
left (compare Fig. 3
B with Fig. 4
B). This was
apparent even at 1 µg/ml anti-CD28, slightly enhanced by the use
of 5 µg/ml CD28 mAb, and not changed further by 10 µg/ml (data not
shown). Now, costimulation with 5 or 10 µg/ml of immobilized
anti-CD28 resulted in complete resistance of
CD8+ T cells to up to 100 nM rapamycin.
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Rapamycin inhibits progression through cell cycle. One of the
major mechanisms of this action is inhibition of the activation of
p70s6k. This kinase phosphorylates the 40S
ribosomal subunit S6, permitting translation and promoting cell cycle
progression. Rapamycin inhibits the activation of
p70s6k, either directly by preventing mTOR
activation of p70s6k, or indirectly by
interfering with mTOR inactivation of the phosphatase PP2A, which
dephosphorylates p70s6k and maintains it in an
inactive state. Given its pivotal role in cell cycle control, and that
it is a well-accepted target of rapamycin inhibition, we examined
phosphorylation of p70s6k.
p70s6k activation is regulated by a series of
phosphorylation events involving eight serine/threonine residues, and
the phosphorylation of T229, S371, and T389 appears to be critical for
catalytic activity (reviewed in Refs. 33, 34). The
phosphorylation of p70s6k results in a mobility
shift of the protein on SDS-PAGE that serves as a surrogate for kinase
activity. The human CD8+ T cell clone TP60 was
pretreated with either vehicle control or 1 µM rapamycin, and then
exposed to PBS- or Tax1119 peptide-pulsed
HLA-A*0201+ EBV-transformed B cells. Cells were
stimulated for 7 h at 37°C, lysed, and separated on 8%
SDS-PAGE. Proteins were transferred to PVDF and immunoblotted with
anti-p70s6k antisera (Fig. 6
A). Tax peptide-pulsed
A*0201-bearing B cells stimulated a shift in the mobility of
p70s6k, such that more of the detected protein
migrated slower on the gel (upper three bands of the four).
Importantly, the addition of rapamycin completely inhibited the
mobility shift of p70s6k, reducing the
p70s6k band to one form, migrating at the fastest
relative speed. This was true despite the fact that under these
conditions proliferation was resistant to inhibition by rapamycin.
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Rapamycin-resistant proliferation of a CD8+ human T cell clone is supported by IL-2
Our studies showed that the rapamycin-resistant proliferation
could not be attributed to residual p70s6k
activity. Rapamycin does not interfere with cytokine production, but
rather blocks proliferation in response to cytokines. Previous reports
found that the up-regulation of the IL-15R
is resistant to treatment
with rapamycin (35), whereas the up-regulation of the
IL-2R
(CD25) is sensitive to inhibition by rapamycin
(36), as are pathways triggered in response to either
IL-15 or IL-2 (3, 35). To clarify the contribution of
IL-15 and IL-2 to the rapamycin-resistant proliferation of the T cell
clone, we determined whether blocking either IL-15 or IL-2 could
prevent rapamycin-resistant proliferation. Because IL-2 is a major
growth factor supporting proliferation of T cells, which is consumed in
these cultures to the extent that it is not readily detected at the
protein level, our approach was to determine whether neutralizing IL-2
would alter rapamycin sensitivity of the T cell clones. The human
CD8+ T cell clone TP60 was pretreated with 1 nM
or 1 µM rapamycin, stimulated with the
HLA-A*0201+ EBV-transformed B cell line (KSB),
and pulsed either with PBS, or 0.1 or 10 µM Tax1119 (Fig. 7
). In the cultures, the cells were
treated with isotype control, anti-IL-15 mAb, or anti-IL-2 mAb
to neutralize IL-15 or IL-2, respectively. As expected, HLA-A*0201 plus
Tax 10 µM, in the presence of isotype control Ab, induced
proliferation that was resistant to the effects of even 1 µM
rapamycin. Treatment with anti-IL-15 affected neither basal
proliferation nor rapamycin-resistant proliferation. However, the
addition of anti-IL-2 both inhibited proliferation in response to
the lower concentration of peptide Ag and converted the
rapamycin-resistant proliferation into rapamycin sensitive. In the
presence of neutralizing anti-IL-2 Ab, even the 1 nM rapamycin
inhibited the 0.1 µM Tax peptide-specific proliferation completely,
and the proliferation triggered by 10 µM Tax peptide was reduced by
50%. Treatment with 1 µM rapamycin nearly abrogated all
proliferation in the presence of anti-IL-2 Ab. Thus, the growth
factor IL-2 was necessary for the Ag-driven rapamycin-resistant
proliferation of the T cell clone.
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| Discussion |
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CD8+ T cells are involved in mediating graft infiltration and rejection. Thus, it was of importance to determine under which conditions rapamycin inhibited clonal expansion of CD8+ T cells. The proliferation of a panel of CD8+ T cell clones recognizing the Tax1119 peptide in the context of HLA-A*0201 was examined. Approximately one-fourth of the CD8+ clones were resistant to rapamycin inhibition after activation via Ag/MHC engagement, and the same clones were uninhibited by rapamycin after anti-CD3-mediated TCR cross-linking, even at high concentrations of drug. Titrating the amount of peptide presented to the T cell clone in the context of cognate MHC or lower degrees of TCR cross-linking resulted in rapamycin sensitivity. We assessed whether changes in the strength of signal delivered through the TCR by allogeneic presentation of Ag would convert rapamycin resistance to sensitivity using the allogeneic HLA-A*0205 MHC to present the Tax1119 peptide to HLA-A*0201-restricted T cell clones. This resulted in conversion of the rapamycin-resistant signal observed with cognate ligand to a rapamycin-sensitive signal. Taken together, these data suggest a partial dependence on strength of TCR signal for rapamycin sensitivity.
We consistently observed that rapamycin enhanced proliferation, albeit to a minor degree, in CD8+ T cell clones stimulated with either peptide/MHC complexes or anti-CD3 mAb. This suggests that the doses of rapamycin used, although much higher than necessary for inhibition of proliferative responses, were not toxic to the cells. In the experiments using peptide/MHC to stimulate the T cell clones, the APC were loaded with peptide, then washed, suggesting that rapamycin was not blocking fratricide that occurs with T-T cell presentation of Ag. However, it has been reported that the type II TNF-R and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand induction are inhibited by rapamycin in murine T cells (37, 38). If this extends to human T cells, the failure to induce TNF-R and/or TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand in the presence of rapamycin may result in the indirect inhibition of activation-induced cell death in our system, and this is currently under investigation.
It was possible that the rapamycin resistance related to changes in T cell function associated with long-term in vitro growth of T cell clones. This was an unlikely explanation for our results, given that the same T cell clone was able to respond with either rapamycin-resistant or rapamycin-sensitive proliferation, depending on the stimulation conditions. Nevertheless, it was of importance to examine circulating CD8+ T cells ex vivo, stimulated with either TCR cross-linking or with allogeneic stimulation, which enabled us to further confirm the ability of CD8+ T cells to proliferate in a rapamycin-resistant manner. CD8+ T cell clonal expansion ex vivo, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation after cocross-linked anti-CD3 (10 or 50 µg/ml) and anti-CD28 (1 µg/ml), was partially blocked by rapamycin, confirming that only a subset of circulating T cells is inhibited by rapamycin. Further efforts to sort and characterize rapamycin-resistant CD8+ T cells are in progress.
The in vivo T cell/APC immunologic synapse consists of both Ag-specific receptor-MHC/peptide complexes and receptor-ligand pairs formed by costimulatory molecules (including CD28, CD2, and CD8) that influence the nature of the T cell signal. We directly investigated whether CD28 engagement could reverse rapamycin sensitivity of TCR cross-linking ex vivo of CD8+ T cells. Both soluble and immobilized anti-CD28 were evaluated in recognition of their different potential to contribute to T cell activation in the absence of APCs. Although CD8+ T cell proliferation induced by triggering the TCR with immobilized anti-CD3 mAb was highly sensitive to rapamycin inhibition, initiating CD28 signals with immobilized anti-CD28 induced rapamycin resistance. Anti-CD8 or anti-CD2 coengagement did not result in rapamycin resistance of CD8+ T cells ex vivo. In total, these experiments indicate that changing either the strength of signal delivered through the TCR or engagement of other T cell surface receptors, such as CD28, can confer rapamycin-resistant proliferation. We focused on only a small number of well-characterized components involved in generating signals through the immune synapse, and predict that engagement of other, unexamined costimulatory molecules may similarly contribute to rapamycin-resistant proliferation.
Rapamycin-resistant T cell proliferation did not correlate with p70s6k phosphorylation despite its critical role in cell cycle transition. That is, rapamycin-resistant proliferation was observed under conditions resulting in efficient inhibition of p70s6k phosphorylation. Because phosphorylation on multiple serine and threonine residues is required for p70s6k enzymatic activity, this confirms that p70s6k was not activated in the presence of rapamycin. This demonstrates that p70s6k activation can be uncoupled from proliferation in both freshly isolated CD8+ T cells and CD8+ T cell clones. Although this uncoupling has been shown in other malignant cell types such as in erythroleukemic cell lines (39), as well as in activated T cells already cycling (40), this is, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of rapamycin resistance in resting, nontransformed T cells. It remains possible that other members of the S6 kinase family with redundant function compensate for p70 inactivity; however, these family members are also sensitive to rapamycin and therefore unlikely to account for the escape from the effects of rapamycin in our system. The inhibition of p70s6k phosphorylation argues that rapamycin, as predicted, is inhibiting mTOR and that other pathways parallel to but not downstream of p70s6k are capable of promoting cell cycle transition and proliferation.
Blocking the T cell growth factor IL-2, but not IL-15, converted the rapamycin-resistant proliferation of CD8+ T cell clones to rapamycin sensitive. This is somewhat unexpected, given that rapamycin classically acts as an inhibitor of responses to cytokines, particularly to IL-2. If rapamycin was fully blocking the response to IL-2, then eliminating IL-2 would have no further effects. The Ag-driven proliferative response to lower Ag concentrations was inhibited by eliminating IL-2 from the extracellular milieu, whereas the response driven by higher concentrations of peptide was unaffected by the removal of IL-2. These data show that the Ag-driven rapamycin-resistant proliferation requires the presence of IL-2. p70s6k activity is downstream of the IL-2R, yet we observed inhibition of p70s6k activity in the presence of rapamycin. These data suggest that pathways parallel to mTOR/p70sk6 that are activated downstream of signaling through the IL-2R account for the ability of a subpopulation of CD8+ T cells to escape cell cycle arrest by rapamycin. A candidate protein in this pathway is c-myc, a regulator of proliferation downstream of IL-2R signaling. C-myc is a regulator of cellular proliferation, its expression is downstream of IL-2R signaling, and c-myc expression has been shown to correlate with rapamycin resistance in human tumor lines (childhood rhabdomyosarcoma and neuroblastoma) (41). Further studies are underway to assess the involvement of c-myc in the rapamycin-resistant proliferation of CD8+ human T cells described in this work. Given these data, our results support the clinical use of rapamycin in combination with other immunosuppressant agents, such as anti-IL-2R Ab (6). In fact, the results of preliminary studies, in which seven diabetic islet transplant recipients treated with low dose rapamycin in combination with Dacromalib (humanized anti-CD25 mAb) and FK506 achieved successful islet transplantation, have been recently reported (9).
Immunosuppressed patients are often highly susceptible to both dangerous microbial infections and carcinogenic events, as the entire immune response is attenuated without specificity. Our studies suggest that rapamycin inhibition of CD8+ T cell responses can be reversed with a strong danger signal with engagement of the TCR alone or in combination with a strong costimulatory signal. This may explain why secondary infections have not been a common occurrence with rapamycin, as it provides a mechanism for the CD8+ arm of the immune system to combat viral infection despite systemic immunosuppression (reviewed in Ref. 42).
Although in this report we studied CD8+ T cells, the effect of rapamycin on CD4+ T cells is of obvious importance. In preliminary investigations, we observed that CD4+ human peripheral blood T cells, as well as a panel of CD4+ T cell clones, appear to be more readily inhibited by rapamycin, even under conditions that elicit rapamycin-resistant proliferation from CD8+ T cells (data not shown). Further investigations are in progress to formally compare the responses of CD8+ and CD4+ T cell populations.
The rapamycin-resistant proliferation of CD8+ T cells in these studies was observed with concentrations of drug that approximate or exceed typical circulating levels in patients treated therapeutically with the immunosuppressant. This may be of clinical importance with respect to determination of application-specific dosages. Our results suggest that further studies on rapamycin and its actions at the cellular level are necessary to fully understand how the drug is capable of acting as a powerful immunosuppressant under some conditions, yet allows some immune responses to escape inhibition. This is particularly important as, more recently, rapamycin is under consideration as a potential therapeutic agent for treatment of autoimmune diseases such as type 1a diabetes and multiple sclerosis. Knowledge of the details of the specific mechanisms of action of rapamycin may facilitate tailoring of combination therapies for diseases with attention to variations among applications. Furthermore, reliable information about what determines rapamycin resistance vs susceptibility may help predict the failure or success of rapamycin treatment in a particular individual.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. David A. Hafler, Center for Neurologic Diseases, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115. ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; HTLV-1, human T cell leukemia virus-1; PBT, peripheral blood T cells; PVDF, polyvinylidene difluoride. ![]()
Received for publication October 27, 2000. Accepted for publication December 29, 2000.
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