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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1996 Oct;106(1):149–155. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2249.1996.d01-812.x

IL-3 derived from CD4+ T cells is essential for the in vitro expansion of mast cells from the normal adult mouse spleen

M HARADA *, H SUMICHIKA *, S HAMANO *, O ITO *, K TAMADA *, M TAKENOYAMA *, G KIMURA *, K NOMOTO *
PMCID: PMC2200554  PMID: 8870713

Abstract

A null cell line (SCM1) was established by a culture of spleen cells (SC) from normal adult C57Bl/6 mice with complete medium alone for 10 days and followed by weekly cultures with a 25% WEHI-3 cell culture supernatant. Phenotype analysis showed that the SCM1 cells were negative for CD3, Thy1.2, B220, Mac-1, Gr-1, NK1.1 and MHC class II, but were positive for MHC class I, FcγRII/III, FcεRI, c-kit and the receptor against wheat germ agglutinin. These findings suggested that the SCM1 cells were mast cells. In an in vitro proliferation assay, SCM1 cells proliferated in the presence of either IL-3 or stem cell factor (SCF), but not in the presence of IL-4, whereas IL-4 showed an augmenting effect on their proliferation in the presence of either IL-3 or SCF. In analysing the mechanism by which such mast cells could be expanded from normal adult mouse SC, the addition of anti-IL-3 MoAb, but not anti-SCF MoAb, into the initial culture inhibited the subsequent expansion of either IL-3- or SCF-responding cells. The prior depletion of CD4+ T cells abrogated the capacity of the SC to enhance the expansion of SCF-responding cells, and this inability was restored by the addition of IL-3. Moreover, the culture supernatant of normal adult SC alone contained considerable levels of IL-3. Taken together, our findings suggest that, in an in vitro culture, CD4+ T cell-derived IL-3 therefore enhances the expansion of mast cells from the normal adult mouse spleen.

Keywords: mast cells, CD4+ T cells, IL-3

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