The mechanisms responsible for the down-modulation of the activation of separated CD4 + or CD8 + human T cell blasts were studied using cells obtained from healthy donors. In the presence of IL-2, human CD8 + T cell blasts were more sensitive than CD4 + T cell blasts to regulation by APO2 ligand/TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (APO2L/TRAIL), while both T cell subsets were equally sensitive to Fas/CD95 regulation. This regulation was defined as inhibition of IL-2-dependent T cell growth in the absence of cell death induction, characterized by cell cycle arrest in G 2 /M. The physiological validity of these observations was corroborated by the demonstration of intracellular FasL and APO2L/TRAIL expression in CD4 + and CD8 + T cell blasts, which were secreted in their bioactive form into the supernatant upon PHA, CD3 or CD59 reactivation. Additionally, the inhibition of IL-2-dependent CD4 + or CD8 + T cell blast growth upon CD3 or CD59 ligation was dependent, at least partially, on FasL and/or APO2L/TRAIL. These data precisely define the role of APO2L/TRAIL in the regulation of human T cell activation.
IntroductionT cell tolerance, involving both central and peripheral mechanisms, is a complex process necessary to maintain normal homeostasis and to avoid autoimmunity. Several mechanisms account for the achievement of T cell peripheral tolerance, and defects in just one of them are normally associated with autoimmunity. Among these mechanisms are: (i) the induction of anergy through antigen presentation by non-APC, in the absence of co-stimulation, or by immature APC [1]; (ii) the action of regulatory T cells of CD4 + CD25 + phenotype [2]; and (iii) the termination of T cell immune responses [3].The regulated termination of T cell immune responses is dependent, in turn, on several complex and possibly overlapping cellular and molecular mechanisms. Of these could be cited the increased expression of the negative regulator CTLA-4 [4], IL-2 deprivation as a consequence of antigen exhaustion [5], and activationinduced cell death (AICD) of over-activated T cells [6]. This last mechanism was first reported to be dependent on the Fas/FasL system [7,8]. In fact, lpr and gld mice deficient in functional Fas or FasL expression, respectively [9,10], or humans with similar defects [11] have systemic autoimmune disease characterized by lymphoproliferation. Our group suggested for the first time the participation of APO2 ligand/TNF-related apoptosisinducing ligand (APO2L/TRAIL) and its receptors DR4 and DR5 in the down-regulation of T cell responses [12]. This participation has been confirmed recently in the APO2L/TRAIL knockout mice, which are more susceptible to autoimmune disease induction [13]. We have also found previously that FasL and APO2L/TRAIL are stored inside normal human T cell blasts in cytoplasmic compartments with characteristics of multivesicular bodies [14] and that they are rapidly released into the supernatant in their bioactive form associated with the internal microvesicles upon reactivation [14,15]. H...