A universal problem in biology is the interpretation of the half-maximal response of a cell population to a stimulus. Either all the cells are producing only one-half of their maximal potential, or one half of the cells are producing at their full potential while the other half are producing nothing. To decide between these two alternatives we examined the production of interleukin 2 by single T cell clones at different concentrations of antigen. The response appeared to be quantal (all or more) but two different levels of response were observed, one approximately 3-4 times the other. Furthermore, the dose response curve was biphasic with a decrease in the number of cells in each group at higher (>30nM) antigen concentrations. Our interpretation of these results is that induction of transcription of the IL-2 gene is what is quantal. Thus, the group of cells giving the low level of IL-2 production had only one chromosome being transcribed, whereas the group giving the higher level of IL-2 production was transcribing both chromosomes. The fact that all the cells were not found in the high positive group at large antigen concentrations possible reflects a negative feedback regulation on IL-2 transcription. Experiments are currently in progress to test these two hypotheses.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01AI000613-02
Application #
3790847
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1992
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Jo, D; Lyu, M S; Cho, E G et al. (2001) Identification and genetic mapping of the mouse Fkbp9 gene encoding a new member of FK506-binding protein family. Mol Cells 12:272-5
Kim, M G; Hong, S J; Son, S J et al. (2001) Quantitative histopathologic findings of erythromelanosis follicularis faciei et colli. J Cutan Pathol 28:160-4
Cho, E G; Kim, M G; Kim, C et al. (2001) N-terminal processing is essential for release of epithin, a mouse type II membrane serine protease. J Biol Chem 276:44581-9
Lee, G; Kim, M G; Yim, J B et al. (2001) Alternative transcriptional initiation and splicing of mouse Lamc2 message. Mol Cells 12:380-90
Kim, M G; Lee, G; Lee, S K et al. (2000) Epithelial cell-specific laminin 5 is required for survival of early thymocytes. J Immunol 165:192-201
Flomerfelt, F A; Kim, M G; Schwartz, R H (2000) Spatial, a gene expressed in thymic stromal cells, depends on three-dimensional thymus organization for its expression. Genes Immun 1:391-401
Kim, M G; Flomerfelt, F A; Lee, K N et al. (2000) A putative 12 transmembrane domain cotransporter expressed in thymic cortical epithelial cells. J Immunol 164:3185-92
Chen, C; Kim, M G; Soo Lyu, M et al. (2000) Characterization of the mouse gene, human promoter and human cDNA of TSCOT reveals strong interspecies homology. Biochim Biophys Acta 1493:159-69
Kim, M G; Chen, C; Lyu, M S et al. (1999) Cloning and chromosomal mapping of a gene isolated from thymic stromal cells encoding a new mouse type II membrane serine protease, epithin, containing four LDL receptor modules and two CUB domains. Immunogenetics 49:420-8