INTERLEUKIN-10 IS EXPRESSED BY BOVINE TYPE-1 HELPER, TYPE-2 HELPER, AND UNRESTRICTED PARASITE-SPECIFIC T-CELL CLONES AND INHIBITS PROLIFERATION OF ALL 3 SUBSETS IN AN ACCESSORY-CELL-DEPENDENT MANNER
Wc. Brown et al., INTERLEUKIN-10 IS EXPRESSED BY BOVINE TYPE-1 HELPER, TYPE-2 HELPER, AND UNRESTRICTED PARASITE-SPECIFIC T-CELL CLONES AND INHIBITS PROLIFERATION OF ALL 3 SUBSETS IN AN ACCESSORY-CELL-DEPENDENT MANNER, Infection and immunity, 62(11), 1994, pp. 4697-4708
Murine interleukin-10 (IL-10) is produced by type 2 helper (Th2) cells
and Selectively inhibits cytokine synthesis by type 1 helper (Th1) ce
lls, whereas human IL-10 is produced by and inhibits proliferation and
cytokine synthesis by both Th1 and Th2 subsets. This study reports th
at bovine IL-10 mRNA is expressed by Th0, Th1, and Th2 clones of bovin
e T cells specific for either Babesia bovis or Fasciola hepatica but n
ot by two CD8(+) T-cell clones. The antigen-induced proliferative resp
onses of all three subsets of CD4(+) cells were inhibited by human IL-
10, and low levels (10 U/ml) of exogenous human IL-2 restored the supp
ressed response. However, proliferation of one Th1 clone was never inh
ibited but was enhanced by IL-10. Human IL-10 also inhibited the expre
ssion of gamma interferon and IL-4 mRNA in Th0 clones. In the absence
of accessory cells (AC), the responses of Th clones to concanavalin A
or IL-2 were not inhibited by IL-10 whereas antigen-specific responses
of Th1 and Th2 cells were reduced when IL-10-pretreated macrophages w
ere used as AC. Together, our results with bovine T cells support the
concept that IL-10 primarily affects AC function and does not directly
inhibit CD4(+) T cells and demonstrate that the immunoregulatory effe
cts of IL-10 are not selectively directed at Th1 populations, as they
are in mice.