Human peripheral blood T lymphocytes were treated with recombinant interleukin 2, mitogens, and dexamethasone. The resulting accumulation of mRNA for interleukin 2 (IL 2), the interleukin 2 receptor (IL 2R), and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) was measured. IL 2 was found to regulate the levels of each of these mRNA. The expression of mRNA for IL 2, IL 2R, and IFN-gamma correlated very well with the levels of protein observed. In populations of peripheral blood T lymphocytes, the production of IL 2 and IFN-gamma were not necessarily coordinately expressed. The sequential expression of these mRNA was investigated in order to determine whether they might be independent of the action of IL 2. IFN-gamma and IL 2 mRNA showed biphasic accumulations. IL 2 mRNA accumulated very rapidly, within 60 min after mitogen stimulation and before any detectable IL 2R mRNA accumulation. Similarly, IFN-gamma mRNA accumulated rapidly, simultaneously with IL 2 mRNA. This early peak of IFN-gamma mRNA, therefore, is likely to be independent of IL 2 action. Both IL 2 and IFN-gamma mRNA then showed later peak times of accumulation. IL 2 mRNA levels peaked at 5 hr after mitogen stimulation, whereas IFN-gamma mRNA levels peaked at 20 hr. IL 2R mRNA continued to accumulate for the full 40 hr of these kinetic experiments. The later accumulations of IFN-gamma and IL 2R mRNA and the resulting expression of the corresponding proteins may therefore be dependent on the earlier production of IL 2 and its subsequent interaction with the IL 2R on the surface of such activated T cells.
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