Treatment with hOKT3gamma1(Ala-Ala) mitigates the deterioration in insulin production and improves metabolic control during the first year of type 1 diabetes mellitus in the majority of patients. The mechanism of action of the anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody may involve direct effects on pathogenic T cells, the induction of populations of regulatory cells, or both.
HuOKT3gamma1(Ala-Ala) possesses the ability to reverse vigorous rejection episodes in kidney and kidney-pancreas transplant recipients, and in comparison to murine OKT3, possesses minimal first dose reactions and does not seem to induce antibodies that bind the OKT3 idiotype. These results support the conduct of additional clinical trials with the huOKT3gamma1(Ala-Ala) antibody.
The relative importance of the cytokine milieu versus cytolytic T lymphocyte-associated antigen 4 (CTLA-4) and T cell receptor signal strength on T cell differentiation remains unclear. Here we have generated mice deficient for signal transducer and activator of transcription 6 (STAT6) and CTLA-4 to determine the role of CTLA-4 in cytokine-driven T cell differentiation. CTLA-4-deficient T cells bypass the need for STAT6 in the differentiation of T helper type 2 (T(H)2) cells. T(H)2 differentiation of cells deficient for both STAT6 and CTLA-4 is accompanied by induction of GATA-3 and the migration of T(H)2 cells to peripheral tissues. CTLA-4 deficiency also affects the balance of the nuclear factors NFATc1 and NFATc2, and enhances activation of NF-kappaB. These results suggest that CTLA-4 has a critical role in T cell differentiation and that STAT6-dependent T(H)2 lineage commitment and stabilization can be bypassed by increasing the strength of signaling through the T cell receptor.
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