Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P14784 (IL-2 receptor)
3,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Evidence is presented that LDH virus infection of mice results in drastic changes in several immune activities. Serum IFN titer and splenic NK activity are increased during the acute phase of infection. NK stimulation is mediated by IFN-alpha,beta since injection of an antibody against murine IFN-alpha,beta is able to abolish the effect. IL-2 production is inhibited throughout the study period following injection of LDH virus (14 days), although a partial recovery is observed during the second week. Similarly, IL-2 receptor expression and MLC responsiveness are suppressed. This suppression lasts for 2 and 7 days respectively after injection. Addition of recombinant IL-2, but not of indomethacin, to the MLC cultures restores the proliferation rate. Not only proliferation but also cytotoxic cell generation in MLC is diminished during the first week after LDH virus injection. Again, this response is normalized at day 14. Additional observations indicate that LDH virus is present in murine neuroblastoma. This explains some of the previously described effects of this tumor on the cellular immune system of the host.
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PMID:Cellular immunity changes caused by LDH virus: analogy with observations of neuroblastoma-bearing mice. 244 3

T cells from the peripheral blood of a T-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (T-CLL) patient, cultured in the presence of interleukin-2 (IL-2), were found to express the p19 structural core protein of the human T-cell leukemia/lymphoma virus (HTLV) and to release type C virus particles. Comparison of the T-CLL cell line with the original leukemic T cells revealed that both the fresh and the proliferating T-CLL cells were pleomorphic cells that showed a convoluted nucleus and formed rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (E-rosettes). They were reactive with the monoclonal antibodies OKT1, OKT4 and OKT11, but not with OKT3, OKT6 or OKT8, indicating that they were mature T cells but that they differed from normal T cells in their lack of reactivity with OKT3. In addition they did not bind peanut agglutinin or OKM-1, and were negative for Epstein-Barr nuclear antigen, surface immunoglobulin, non-specific esterase activity of Fc- or complement receptors. Part of the fresh T-CLL cells reacted with a monoclonal antibody recognizing HLA-DR antigens (p29, 34) (36%) and with anti-Tac (62%), a monoclonal antibody directed at the IL-2 receptor, indicating that the T-CLL cells were partially activated already in vivo. After culture in vitro all proliferating T-CLL cells expressed HLA-DR and Tac antigens. The fresh T-CLL cells were found to be defective in cell-mediated lympholysis (CML) generated in mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC), antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and lectin-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (LDCC). In addition they failed to exhibit natural killer (NK) cell activity against targets that are usually very susceptible to lysis, such as K562, but were able to kill two tumor-derived cell lines, the melanoma NKI-4 and the neuroblastoma CHP-100. The same pattern of selective killing was observed using the proliferating T-CLL cells as effectors, or cloned T-CLL cultures obtained from them by limiting dilution procedures. Therefore, it was concluded that the T-CLL cells represented a clonal expansion of neoplastic T cells that retained their phenotype and cytotoxic properties after culture in vitro.
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PMID:Phenotypic and functional characterization of HTLV positive neoplastic T cells cultured with interleukin-2--I. Retention of morphology, phenotype and selective cytotoxic properties in long term culture. 632 59

While interleukin-2 (IL-2) has been shown to produce a variety of effects in the CNS and has recently been implicated as an endogenous brain neurokine, little is known about the molecular biology of IL-2 receptors in normal brain. The present investigation provides the first evidence that mRNA for IL-2 receptor-beta (IL-2R beta), an essential subunit for signal transduction by peripheral immune cells, is expressed in normal murine forebrain. Using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) cloning, a partial cDNA (349 bp) corresponding to the extracellular domain was cloned and found to have the identical sequence as the lymphocyte IL-2R beta. IL-2R beta mRNA expression was confirmed by a ribonuclease protection assay, and using in situ hybridization histochemistry, IL-2R beta mRNA was localized in the hippocampus where an intense signal was present over the neuron-rich granule cells of the dentate gyrus and Ammon's horn. Moreover, cDNA clones obtained from two murine neuroblastoma cell lines exhibited the same sequence as IL-2R beta cDNA from normal brain. IL-2R beta gene expression was also detected in the frontal cortex and striatum using PCR. Further in situ hybridization studies will be important to extend this initial observation to determine the brain regional localization and cell-specific anatomy of IL-2R beta mRNA in the CNS.
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PMID:Molecular cloning of a partial cDNA of the interleukin-2 receptor-beta in normal mouse brain: in situ localization in the hippocampus and expression by neuroblastoma cells. 795 64

In this study we have investigated, at the population and the clonal levels, the immunophenotypes and the non-specific cytotoxic functions of peripheral blood lymphocytes from three stage IV neuroblastoma patients receiving treatment with recombinant interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interferon alpha (IFN alpha). Both IL-2 alone and the combination of IL-2 and IFN alpha caused an in vivo expansion of CD56+, CD3- NK cells most of which expressed the p75 molecule, i.e. the beta chain of the IL-2 receptor. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), drawn after treatment, displayed an increased NK activity, but no lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) activity. However, the subsequent in vitro culture of PBMC with high-dose IL-2 induced the generation of a potent LAK activity, which was mediated by an expanded population of CD3+, CD8+ T cells. Finally lymphocytes that had been isolated after cytokine therapy were cloned, in the presence of low-dose phytohemagglutin, immediately or following culture with IL-2. Clones derived from LAK cells expanded in vitro had predominantly a CD3+, CD8+ immunophenotype, whereas those raised from freshly separated lymphocytes were either CD3+, CD4+ or CD3+, CD8+ in equal proportions. Most of the above clones were poorly or not at all cytolytic against NK-sensitive or NK-resistant targets. In contrast, the few NK clones obtained (CD3-, CD56+) lysed all targets with high efficiency.
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PMID:Clonal analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes from three patients with advanced neuroblastoma receiving recombinant interleukin-2 and interferon alpha. 851 51

The aim of this work was to monitor the functional and phenotypic variations of natural killer (NK) cells in seven children with stage IV neuroblastoma (NB) treated with recurrent 5-day cycles of interleukin-2 (IL-2) at a dose of 18 x 10(6) IU/m2/d by continuous intravenous infusion. All patients who entered the study had no detectable disease after hematologic recovery from intensive chemotherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation (ABMT). To evaluate the effect of this treatment on tumor relapse, IL-2 immunotherapy was adjusted to maintain levels of NK activity above those of age-matched controls (threshold of 40 lytic units [LU]/10(9) mononuclear cells) during a 1-year period since hematologic recovery of ABMT. The levels of NK and endogenous lymphokine-activated killer (eLAK) cell cytotoxic activities, as well as phenotype-differentiated lymphocyte counts, were determined from patients' freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (MNC). Data were analyzed at different points between each cycle of IL-2, and before and 36 hours after each infusion. NK and eLAK activities significantly increased in response to IL-2. Both cytotoxic parameters correlated with the serum levels of the soluble IL-2 receptor (sIL-2R). IL-2 increased the amounts of NK and T cell subsets but not of B cells. The effects of IL-2 were time-dependent. Early cycles of IL-2 preferentially increased cell numbers, especially of cells bearing a CD3-/CD16-/CD56+bright and CD8+dim phenotype. Conversely, late courses promoted higher cytotoxic effects but with a smaller increase in NK and T cell counts; the main NK subset became CD16+, and CD8+dim cells remained a minor subset. It is worthy to note that the patient who relapsed after completing immunotherapy showed only a slight increase of the NK subset in response to IL-2. These results show the feasibility of sustaining an increased NK activity during 1 year after ABMT in children with advanced neuroblastoma and suggest the occurrence of changes in the functional and phenotypic characteristics of the NK cells generated throughout the 1-year treatment.
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PMID:Progression of natural immunity during one-year treatment of residual disease in neuroblastoma patients with high doses of interleukin-2 after autologous bone marrow transplantation. 854 30

Immunization of cancer patients with cytokine-engineered tumor cells is being currently tested in several trials. To test the feasibility of this approach in neuroblastoma (NB) patients we investigated the functional consequences of interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene transfer into NB cell lines. Two human NB cell lines were transfected with the plasmid expression vector RSV.5neo containing the human IL-2 cDNA, and their tumorigenicity was evaluated in a nude mice xenograft model after characterization of the growth patterns and phenotypic features in vitro. The combination of IL-2 gene transfection and the xenograft model in nude mice was chosen on the basis of the low or absent expression of HLA class I antigen in human NB tumors. Our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of an immunization protocol that could elicit a nonspecific antitumor response. The IL-2 stable transfectants were morphologically identical to parental or vector-transfected cells but completely lost tumorigenicity and inhibited, through a bystander effect, the growth of parental cells injected simultaneously at the same site. Histologic and immunohistochemical analysis of the nodules showed extensive necrosis with severe endothelial damage. The infiltrating cells were mainly macrophages, while natural killer (NK) cells were scarce. However, depletion of NK cells by anti-CD122 monoclonal antibody indicated that the rejection process required NK cell activity. The relevance of these data for the development of therapeutic approaches using cytokine-engineered NB cell lines is discussed.
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PMID:Characterization and tumorigenicity of human neuroblastoma cells transfected with the IL-2 gene. 947 65

Clinical impact of s.c. administration of IL-2 and/or IFN alpha was studied in 23 pediatric patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (IFN alpha group) and sarcoma, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, peripheral neuroepitelioma, neuroblastoma, and embryonic carcinoma (IL-2 + IFN alpha group) after autologous PBSC transplantation. Expression of CD3, CD4, CD8, CD25, CD38, CD56, CD71, CD122, and HLA-DR antigens, serum level of the soluble IL-2R alpha, and NK activity against K562 cell line were evaluated in 11 patients representative for both types of immunotherapy. T and, more markedly, NK cell proliferation, induction of activation markers on the surface of T and NK subsets, and elevation of sIL-2R alpha concentrations were seen in the IL-2 + IFN alpha subgroup. In the IFN alpha subgroup, the total number of lymphocytes and expression of activation markers remained unchanged, but the number of CD8+ T cells increased at the expense of CD4+ T and NK cells during the therapy. Cytotoxic activity against K562 cells was not influenced by the immunotherapy in either subgroup. No significant clinical benefit of the immunotherapy was seen in these patients compared to 27 control patients with relevant diagnoses who did not receive immunotherapy.
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PMID:Clinical ineffectiveness of IL-2 and/or IFN alpha administration after autologous PBSC transplantation in pediatric oncological patients. 1068 13