RESUMO
Under physiological conditions, T cell activation by major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-antigen complexes requires engagement of both the T cell receptor (TcR) and the CD4 (or CD8) accessory molecules. It has been shown, however, that ligation of CD4 and CD8 can also inhibit T cell activation in an MHC-independent way. Therefore, the role of CD4 in T cell activation and the mechanism of the suppression of T cell functions by anti-CD4 are as yet unclear. We activated T cells by CD4/CD3 co-cross-linking and studied the effect of preincubation with anti-CD4 on this activation. We show here that anti-CD4 effects T cell activation in a complex, time-dependent manner. Whereas short preincubations with anti-CD4 usually enhanced T cell proliferation in response to subsequent co-cross-linking of CD3 with CD4, longer preincubations led to its decrease. The observed suppression of proliferation after a long preincubation with anti-CD4 was apparently due to impairment of TcR signaling, as assessed by measurement of Ca2+ mobilization and tyrosine phosphorylation in T cells. These results add a temporal element to the previously observed synergism between the TcR and CD4 in T cell activation.