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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1997 Dec;110(3):447–453. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.1997.4441458.x

The avidity of allospecific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) determines their cytokine production profile

N E M VAN EMMERIK *,, C R DAANE *, C J KNOOP *, C HESSE *, L M B VAESSEN *, A H M M BALK , B MOCHTAR , F H J CLAAS , W WEIMAR *
PMCID: PMC1904811  PMID: 9409650

Abstract

Donor-specific CTL present within the cardiac allograft during a rejection episode are distinct from those that populate the cardiac allograft in the absence of rejection. Whereas the former generally have a high avidity for donor cells, the latter mainly have a low avidity for donor cells. This observation made us reason that high-avidity CTL are implicated in transplant rejection, whereas low-avidity CTL are not. In the present study, we analyse whether both CTL subsets were distinct with respect to their IL-2, IL-4, IL-6 and interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) secretion pattern. CTL clones with either a high or a low avidity for donor antigens were stimulated with donor cells, third party cells, or immobilized anti-CD3 MoAb and the amount of cytokine released was measured. High- and low-avidity CTL clones were found to differ with respect to their IFN-γ production profile. Stimulation with donor cells resulted in IFN-γ secretion by high-avidity CTL clones, but not by low-avidity CTL clones. CD3 stimulation, in contrast, led to secretion of equivalent amounts of IFN-γ by both CTL subsets. These observations indicate that low-avidity CTL are fully capable of producing IFN-γ, but, in contrast to high avidity CTL, fail to do so when they encounter donor cells. As IFN-γ favours the occurrence of transplant rejection, this observation emphasizes the relevance of high-avidity CTL in the rejection process. Additionally, the data show that the cytokine production profile of CTL depends on the nature of the stimulus.

Keywords: avidity, transplantation, interferon-gamma, cytokine

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