MACROPHAGES AS TARGETS FOR INHIBITION BY CYCLOSPORINE
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 47 (4) , 696-703
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198904000-00024
Abstract
In order to understand the mechanism of immunosuppression by cyclosporine, its effects on macrophage-mediated antigen-specific T cell activation (IL-2 production) were studied in vitro. While cyclosporine (CsA) present during the macrophage-T cell coculture inhibited antigen presentation effectively, pretreatment (2 hr) of macrophages with the drug also caused marked inhibition regardless of the antigen concentration and order of drug/antigen addition. Pretreatment of T cells caused only modest inhibition. With macrophage pretreatment, the structural analog cyclosporine-G had the same inhibitory activity as cyclosporine (cyclosporine-A), whereas dihydro-cyclosprine-D and cyclosporine-H were inactive. Cyclosporine demonstrated saturable binding to macrophages suggesting the existence of CsA-binding sites. A 50% inhibition of IL-2 production was achieved with 10-6 M CsA and 60-70% of the binding sites were occupied at this concentration. CsA-treated macrophages did not release inhibitory material and the drug did not appear to be transferred from the macrophages of the T cells during the coculture. Although antigen-specific T cells could bind to drug-treated macrophages, they did not produce IL-2. Collectively, these results suggest that CsA has a direct effect on macrophages that subsequently interfers with IL-2 production at a stage following T cell antigen recognition.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
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