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Overexpression of Interleukin (IL)-7 Leads to IL-15independent Generation of Memory Phenotype CD8+ T Cells
2 Division of Developmental Immunology, The La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, San Diego, CA 92121
3 U548 INSERM, CEA-Grenoble, F-38054 Grenoble, France
Address correspondence to Charles D. Surh, Dept. of Immunology, IMM-26, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 North Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037. Phone: 858-784-2006; Fax: 858-784-8227; E-mail: csurh{at}scripps.edu
| Abstract |
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Key Words: T lymphocytes homeostasis cytokines mice transgenic
| Introduction |
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chain (
c)* family of cytokines (IL-2, -4, -7, -9, -15) appears essential for memory CD4+ cells (8). By contrast, memory CD8+ cells are heavily dependent on IL-15 (9, 10). Thus, most memory CD8+ cells express elevated levels of the IL-15R CD122, undergo selective proliferation in response to IL-15, and are markedly depleted in IL-15 and IL-15R
- mice (912). IL-7 was initially described as a growth factor for B cell progenitors and was shown to be produced by bone marrow stromal cells (13). Subsequent studies showed that IL-7 is also synthesized by other tissues, including thymic and intestinal epithelial cells (14, 15). Furthermore, a generation of IL-7- and IL-7R- mice revealed that IL-7 has a nonredundant role in supporting early development of both B and T cells (16, 17). In addition to knockout mice, four independent lines of transgenic (TG) mice overexpressing IL-7 were generated in the early 1990s (1821). Although most of the TG mice were found to possess increased numbers of B and T cells, a careful examination of the T cell pool was not performed.
To study the effect of IL-7 overproduction on T cell homeostasis, we analyzed a B6 TG line that expresses a high copy number of IL-7 cDNA under the control of the MHC class II promoter (21). Despite a marked (2550-fold) elevation in IL-7 levels, these mice appear healthy and, unlike other lines (18, 20), remained free of dermatitis (21); tumor formation is low and restricted to B cells. Here, we show that the massive overproduction of T cells in IL-7 TG mice is largely skewed to memory-phenotype CD44hi CD122hi CD8+ cells. Based on the results of crossing IL-7 TG mice to TCR TG and IL-15- mice, IL-7 may play an important role in guiding both the generation and maintenance of memory CD8+ cells.
| Materials and Methods |
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FACS® Analysis.
Suspensions of thymus, LN, and spleen cells were double- and triple-stained as described previously (2) using various combinations of PE-anti-CD44, PE-anti-CD122, Cy5-anti-CD8, FITC-anti-CD8, Cy5-anti-CD4, Cy5-anti-Ly 5.1, and biotinylated T3.70 (all from eBioscience). Biotinylated antiThy-1.1, anti-
c and FITC-Vß5, and PE-V
2 antibodies were purchased from BD PharMingen. Biotinylated mAbs were detected with Cy5-conjugated streptavidin (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories).
For intracellular cytokine staining, spleen cells (4 x 106 cells per milliliter) in complete medium containing 0.67 µls/ml Brefeldin A (GolgiStop; BD PharMingen) were incubated for 7 h in 24-well plates coated with anti-CD3 (2C11; eBioscience) mAb (0.5 µg/ml) and stained as described previously (22). Briefly, cells were first stained with Cy5-anti-CD8 and PE-anti-CD44, fixed with paraformaldehyde followed by permeabilization with saponin and stained with FITC-antiIFN-
mAb (eBioscience).
To assess homeostatic proliferation, small numbers (106 cells per mouse) of FACS®-sorted CD44hi CD8+ cells were labeled with CFSE (Molecular Probes) and injected into mice exposed to 600 cGy irradiation and analyzed 7 d later as described previously (2).
The rate of background T cell turnover in adult thymectomized mice was performed by adding BrdU (0.8 mg/ml) into the drinking water for 7 d and staining LN cells as described previously (23).
Effect of cytokines in vitro was assessed by culturing CD4+ and CD8+ cells (2 x 106 cells per milliliter), purified as described previously (2), for 5 d in complete medium containing IL-7 and/or IL-15 at 20 ng/ml. Some cultures contained mAbs to IL-7R (A7R34) (24) and IL-2Rß (TM-ß1) (25) at 50 µg/ml. The in vivo effect of blocking IL-7R was measured by injecting mice intraperitoneally with either 200 µg of salt-precipitated A7R34 ascites or 200 µg of rat IgG every other day over a 7-d period. In vitrocultured cells and LN and spleen cells from antibody-injected mice were analyzed by triple staining with FITC-anti-CD4, Cy5-anti-CD8 and PE-anti-CD44, or PE-anti-CD122 mAbs.
CDR3 Lengths Analysis of TCR Chains.
Spectratyping of TCR-V
and -Vß repertoire was performed on purified CD4+ and CD8+ cells as described previously (26). Briefly, after cDNA synthesis from total RNA, the RNA was denatured and reverse transcribed. Small aliquots of the cDNA were amplified by PCR using primers previously described to analyze the repertoire of V
and Vß chains (27). The PCR product was then subjected to run-off reaction with fluorescent-tagged primers and analyzed by capillary electrophoresis in an automated DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems) and the distribution of CDR3 lengths determined.
| Results and Discussion |
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50-fold for CD122hi cells and
25-fold for CD44hi cells but only
4-fold for naive CD44lo cells. For CD4+ cells, CD44hi cells were elevated by
5-fold and CD44lo cells by
4-fold (Fig. 1 A). Expression of other markers, such as CD25, CD62L, CD69, IL-7R
, on TG T cells was comparable to wild-type T cells (data not shown).
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chains revealed that the CDR3 lengths were randomly distributed for all chains similar to T cells from littermates (LMs) (Fig. 1 C). The experiments discussed below address the issue of why IL-7 TG mice show a preferential elevation of memory phenotype CD8+ cells. Why these mice also show a milder increase in naive phenotype cells, despite having a normal thymus, will be the subject of another paper.
Functional Capacity of IL-7 TG CD44hi CD8+ Cells.
By two different parameters, TG CD44hi CD8+ cells closely resembled CD44hi CD8+ cells from wild-type mice. First, as measured by BrdU incorporation in thymectomized mice, the turnover of TG CD44hi CD8+ (and CD44hi CD4+) cells was relatively slow, in fact slower than in LMs; this finding applied both in adult (8-wk) mice (Fig. 2
A) and also in neonatal (3-wk) mice (data not shown). Hence the increase in CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice did not reflect an increase in their rate of division. However, total numbers of proliferating T cells in IL-7 TG mice were 710-fold higher than in wild-type mice. Second, as measured by division of CFSE-labeled cells, sorted TG CD44hi CD8+ cells transferred to irradiated B6 hosts behaved similarly to normal B6 CD44hi CD8+ cells in their rapid rate of homeostatic proliferation in these T celldepleted hosts (Fig. 2 B). Moreover, like normal CD44hi CD8+ cells (Fig. 2 C), but unlike naive CD44lo CD8+ cells (6), IL-7 TG CD44hi CD8+ cells underwent efficient homeostatic proliferation in MHC class I- (ß2m-D-K-) mice (Fig. 2 C).
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synthesis. Thus, after in vitro stimulation with anti-CD3 mAb, the proportion of IFN-
synthesizing cells was much higher for TG CD44hi CD8+ cells (49%) than for normal B6 CD44hi CD8+ cells (9%) (Fig. 3
D). Since IL-7 has costimulatory activity for T cell stimulation and function (30, 31), this difference could be a reflection of prior exposure of the TG cells to high levels of IL-7 in vivo.
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For the OT-I line, nearly all (
95%) of the CD8+ cells in this line are clonotype-positive (V
2+ Vß5+) cells and have a naive CD44lo phenotype (data not shown). These naive cells appear to have significant affinity for self-MHC/peptide ligands because exposure to these ligands after transfer to T celldepleted hosts causes strong homeostatic proliferation of the cells and a switch to a memory phenotype (3). When OT-I mice were crossed to IL-7 TG mice, thus producing OT-I IL-7 TG mice, total numbers of CD8+ cells in these mice were increased about threefold relative to OT-I LMs that lacked the IL-7 transgene (Fig. 3). Significantly, numbers of CD44hi CD8+ cells were
20-fold higher in OT-I IL-7 TG mice than in normal OT-I LMs. In addition, in contrast to OT-I LMs, many of the "CD44lo" cells in OT-I IL-7 TG mice were actually CD44int rather than CD44lo (Fig. 3). This finding is of interest because OT-I cells show a similar CD44int/hi phenotype after homeostatic proliferation in T celldepleted hosts (3). Since nearly all (
95%) of the CD8+ cells in OT-I IL-7 TG mice were V
2+ Vß5+, therefore, it would seem highly likely that the stimulus for expansion of CD44int/hi cells in these mice was provided by self-MHC/peptide ligands rather than foreign antigens. Thus, the implication is that high levels of IL-7 in OT-I IL-7 TG mice act as a costimulator to drive naive OT-I cells to undergo proliferation and differentiation in response to self-MHC/peptide ligands. Despite the high penetrance of the OT-I transgene, however, one caveat is that the IL-7 TG OT-I mice were not in a background (recombination activating gene [RAG]- or TCR-
-) that precludes expression of endogenous TCR chains. Therefore, the contribution of foreign antigens in upregulation of CD44 cannot be totally excluded.
If self-MHC/peptide ligands are driving production of CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice, the capacity of high levels of IL-7 to augment T cell reactivity to self-MHC/peptide ligands might not apply to T cells with "below average" affinity to self-ligands. To assess this possibility we examined the HY TCR TG line. As shown previously, the TCR clonotype-positive cells in this line (detected by T3.70 mAb) fail to undergo homeostatic proliferation in T celldepleted hosts (2), presumably because the TCR affinity of T3.70+ cells for self-ligands is quite low. HY T cells do undergo homeostatic proliferation but this applies only to the T3.70- subset (2). As shown in Fig. 3, HY IL-7 TG mice showed a marked expansion of CD44hi CD8+ cells. Significantly, almost all of these cells were T3.70-; there was no expansion of T3.70+ cells and these cells retained a naive CD44lo phenotype. Thus, expansion of T3.70- but not T3.70+ cells in HY IL-7 TG mice correlated closely with the capacity of T3.70- but not T3.70+ cells to undergo homeostatic proliferation in T celldepleted hosts.
Collectively, these data on OT-I and HY mice suggest that a significant proportion of the expanded CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice are derived from precursor cells stimulated by self-MHC/peptide ligands. This notion is consistent with the finding that the TCR repertoire of TG CD8+ cells appears very diverse (Fig. 1 C). In addition, however, a proportion of the expanded CD44hi CD8+ cells may arise through the action of IL-7 on naive CD8+ cells responding to foreign antigens. In this respect, we have observed that IL-7 has marked costimulatory activity for T cells responding to foreign antigens in vivo. Thus, injection of male splenic APC into IL-7 TG HY mice led to much greater expansion of T3.70+ cells followed by establishment of a larger pool of T3.70+ memory CD44hi CD8+ cells than was observed in HY mice lacking IL-7 transgene (data not shown). Although the relative contribution made by foreign versus self-antigens in the production of CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice is unknown it is notable that the marked increase in CD44hi CD8+ cell numbers in these mice is apparent even in neonatal (1.5 wk) mice (data not shown). With high IL-7 levels, CD44hi CD8+ cells arise very early in life and accumulate progressively.
IL-15independent Generation of CD44hi CD8+ Cells in IL-7 TG Mice.
As mentioned earlier (see Introduction), survival of most CD44hi CD8+ cells in T cellsufficient mice has recently been shown to be heavily dependent on IL-15 (911). IL-15 dependency is particularly pronounced for CD122hi CD44hi CD8+ cells, as these cells are conspicuously absent in IL-15- mice (unpublished data). To determine whether the generation and/or the maintenance of CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice is IL-15 dependent, IL-7 TG mice were crossed with IL-15- mice. Surprisingly, comparison of 4-wk-old IL-15- IL-7 TG mice with age-matched control IL-15+ IL-7 TG LMs revealed that IL-15 is dispensable for generation of CD122hi CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice. Thus, in terms of both total cellularity and phenotype, including both CD44 and CD122 expression, the peripheral CD8+ cell compartment was comparable in IL-15+ IL-7 TG versus IL-15- IL-7 TG mice (Fig. 4) . The proportions of CD122hi CD8+ and CD44hi CD81 cells in cell cycle, as determined by BrdU labeling, were also comparable between IL-15+ versus IL-15- IL-7 TG mice (data not shown). It should be mentioned that IL-15 deficiency was accompanied by a slight reduction in the total number of CD8+ cells and a minor increase in the total number of CD4+ cells (Fig. 4). The point to emphasize, however, is that numbers of IL-15 responsive CD122hi CD8+ cells rose from nearly undetectable levels in IL-15- mice to very high levels in IL-7 TG IL-15- mice (Fig. 4).
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mAb, and the presence of anti-CD122 mAb did not diminish the effect of IL-7 (Fig. 5 A). This finding also applied when the concentration of IL-7 was raised to a high level (data not shown). Second, injecting either IL-7 TG or IL-15- IL-7 TG mice for 1 wk with antiIL-7R
mAb (200 µg every other day) caused a marked reduction in total numbers of CD44hi CD8+ cells in the mice (Fig. 5 B). A partial reduction in CD44hi CD8+ cells numbers was also observed in control LM mice (Fig. 5 B). The reduction in cell numbers in these mice is unlikely to be due to antibody-mediated opsonization as depletion of other IL-7Rhi cells, e.g., CD44hi CD4+ cells and mature B cells, was minimal (data not shown). Our observation that the elevation of T cell numbers in IL-7 TG mice is skewed toward CD8+ cells is consistent with prior evidence on the effects of short-term injection of IL-7 into normal mice (2830). Although these latter data indicated that IL-7 acted largely on peripheral T cells (rather than thymocytes), the issue of whether IL-7 stimulated naive T cells or memory T cells or both subsets was not resolved. The data in this paper suggest that, in IL-7 TG mice, elevated levels of IL-7 boost homeostasis of memory CD8+ cells through two different mechanisms.
First, the data on IL-7 TG TCR TG mice suggest that high levels of IL-7 amplify TCR recognition of self-MHC ligands by naive CD8+ cells. For these cells, TCR recognition of self-ligands in the presence of background levels of IL-7 normally induces a covert signal that is sufficient to keep naive CD8+ cells alive, but without inducing proliferation or a change in surface phenotype. With high levels of IL-7, however, TCR signaling is enhanced and contact with self-ligands causes naive CD8+ cells to proliferate and differentiate into memory phenotype cells.
Second, the high levels of IL-7 contribute to survival and turnover of established memory phenotype CD8+ cells. As discussed earlier, the background turnover and survival of CD44hi CD8+ cells is normally controlled by IL-15; IL-7 is not important, probably because levels of IL-7 in the peripheral lymphoid tissues of normal mice are too low to play a significant role in homeostasis. However, in IL-7 TG mice one can envisage that IL-7 and IL-15 both contribute to homeostasis. The presence of large numbers of CD44hi CD122hi CD8+ cells in IL-15- IL-7 TG mice but not normal IL-15- mice is then readily explained. Here, high levels of IL-7 compensate for the lack of IL-15 and homeostasis of CD44hi CD8+ cells remains normal. The finding that the total numbers of CD44hi CD8+ cells in IL-15- IL-7 TG mice dropped sharply after treatment with antiIL-7R mAb is consistent with this idea. However, the finding that antiIL-7R mAb treatment had a similar effect on IL-15+ IL-7 TG mice is surprising because here we expected the cells to be rescued by IL-15. It is conceivable, however, that the massive overproduction of CD122hi CD8+ cells in IL-7 TG mice depletes IL-15, thus causing the cells to be heavily dependent on IL-7.
In addition to memory phenotype CD8+ cells, IL-7 TG mice clearly contain increased numbers of naive T cells, including both CD4+ and CD8+ cells. Likewise, naive T cell increase in number after injection of IL-7 (2830). How IL-7 leads to expansion of naive T cells is unknown, although increases in cell survival, proliferation, and release of new T cells from the thymus are all likely possibilities. Resolving this important issue will have to await further investigation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by U.S. Public Health Service grants AI21487, CA38355, and AI46710 (to J. Sprent) and AI41079, AI45809, and AG20186 (to C.D. Surh). J.T. Tan and W.C. Kieper are supported by U.S. Public Health Service Institute National Research Service Award HL07196 and AI07244, respectively. C.D. Surh is a Scholar of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
Submitted: January 15, 2002
Revised: April 4, 2002
Accepted: May 9, 2002
| Footnotes |
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c, common
chain; LM, littermate; TG, transgenic. | References |
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