IL-2 regulates expansion of CD4+ T cell populations by affecting cell death: insight from modeling CFSE data
Publication date
2007
Authors
Ganusov, V.V.
Milutinovic, D.
Boer, R.J. de
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Article
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Abstract
It is generally accepted that IL-2 influences the dynamics of populations of T cells in vitro and in vivo. However, which parameters
for cell division and/or death are affected by IL-2 is not well understood. To get better insights into the potential ways of how IL-2
may influence the population dynamics of T cells, we analyze data on the dynamics of CFSE-labeled polyclonal CD4+ T lymphocytes
in vitro after anti-CD3 stimulation at different concentrations of exogenous IL-2. Inferring cell division and death rates
from CFSE-delabeling experiments is not straightforward and requires the use of mathematical models. We find that to adequately
describe the dynamics of T cells at low concentrations of exogenous IL-2, the death rate of divided cells has to increase
with the number of divisions cells have undergone. IL-2 hardly affects the average interdivision time. At low IL-2 concentrations
1) fewer cells are recruited into the response and successfully complete their first division; 2) the stochasticity of cell division is
increased; and 3) the rate, at which the death rate increases with the division number, increases. Summarizing, our mathematical
reinterpretation suggests that the main effect of IL-2 on the in vitro dynamics of naive CD4+ T cells occurs by affecting the rate
of cell death and not by changing the rate of cell division.