4A). As was the case for unfractionated PBMCs, levels of sCTLA-4 produced by CD4+ T cells were suppressed with increasing doses of anti-CD3 mAb (Fig. 4A). The selleck screening library next question was whether sCTLA-4 can contribute to Treg-cell suppressive function. We compared the ability
of fractionated CD4+CD25+ T cells from PBMCs to inhibit responses of the corresponding CD4+CD25− effector population in the presence of isoform-specific anti-sCTLA-4 Ab or an IgG1 isotype control (Fig. 4B, representative of n = 5). In cultures with equal numbers of CD4+CD25+ (Treg cells) and CD4+CD25− (Teff cells), and where regulation is accepted to be cell contact-dependent, blockade of sCTLA-4 marginally abrogated the suppressive capacity of the CD4+CD25+ cells as judged by cell proliferation and IFN-γ production. However, as relative numbers of Treg cells to Teff cells were reduced to more physiological ratios, the capacity of Treg cells to inhibit activated Teff cells was reduced by Ab blockade of sCTLA-4. Further, blockade of Teff cells alone, also demonstrated some increase in immune cell activity, indicating that Treg cells are not the only T-cell
source of sCTLA-4. Finally, Ab blockade of Treg Buparlisib cost cells alone had no effect on either cell proliferation or IFN-γ production. To further demonstrate sCTLA-4 can be secreted by the Treg-cell population, we isolated CD4+CD25+ T cells, expanded them in the presence of IL-2 and Treg-cell expansion beads for 9 days, rested them for a further 3 days and then tested for sCTLA-4 expression by flow cytometry using the isoform-specific mAb JMW-3B3 (Fig. 4C). These cultures yielded Branched chain aminotransferase a CD4+CD25bright T-cell population with low expression levels of the IL-7R, CD127. Low expression of CD127 on CD4+CD25bright cells acts as a reliable marker of human Treg cells, obviating the potential problem of contamination in humans by non-Treg cells that
may also express FoxP3+ [25-29]. Analyses of these cells, either resting or restimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 beads, showed higher expression of both sCTLA-4 and FoxP3 compared with autologous CD4+CD25− populations. Analysis of FoxP3 and sCTLA-4 expression in these Treg cells revealed that they were enriched both in resting and activated Treg cells, compared with autologous effector cells that had lower levels. Deficiency or blockade of CTLA-4 has profound effects on immunity in vivo [30-33] and it has previously been assumed that these were due exclusively to targeting of the membrane-bound isoform. However, given the evidence from our human in vitro studies of sCTLA-4, we wanted to test whether similar effects were seen in murine responses and in disease in vivo. First, we confirmed that the sCTLA-4–specific blocking mAb JMW-3B3 can enhance murine T-cell responses in vitro, parallel to its effects on human PBMCs.