SummaryB chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) is characterized by the accumulation of slow-dividing and long-lived monoclonal B cells arrested at the intermediate stage of their differentiation . We previously showed that interleukin 4 (IL4) not only inhibits but also prevents the proliferation of B-CLL cells. We report here that IL-4 protects the B-CLL cells from death by apoptosis (programmed cell death [PCD]) . IL-4 inhibits spontaneous and hydrocortisone (HC)-induced PCD of highly purified B cells from 12 unselected CLL patients, as shown by sustained cell viability and lack of DNA fragmentation . IL1, -2, -3, -5, -6, -7, tumor necrosis factor a, and transforming growth factor (3 have no protective effect . The in vitro rescue from apoptosis by IL-4 is reflected by an increased expression of Bcl-2 protein, a proto-oncogene directly involved in the prolongation of cell survival in vivo and in vitro. Hence, IL-4-treated B-CLL cells express significantly more Bcl-2 than unstimulated, HC-treated, or fresh B-CLL cells. Furthermore, subcutaneous injection of IL4 into one CLL patient enhances Bcl-2 protein expression in the leukemic B cells . These data may suggest that IL-4 prevents apoptosis of B-CLL cells using a Bcl-2-dependent pathway. Given our recent observations that fresh T cells from B-CLL patients express IL-4 mRNA, we propose that IL-4 has an essential role in the pathogenesis of CLL disease, by preventing both the death and the proliferation of the malignant B cells .
The CD20 molecule is a unique phosphoprotein exclusively expressed on B cells during most stages of B cell ontogeny. We here report that rIL-4 down-regulates the expression of CD20 with anti-Leu-16 mAb (clone L27) on both unstimulated and anti-mu preactivated normal and leukemic B cells. None of the other recombinant lymphokines tested (IL-1, IL-2, IL-3, IL-6, IFN-alpha, and IFN-gamma, granulocyte/macrophage-CSF, transforming growth factor-beta, TNF-alpha, and lymphotoxin) decreased CD20 expression. Incubation of unstimulated or anti-mu preactivated B cells with IL-4 did not affect the steady state CD20 mRNA, suggesting that IL-4 exerted its effect mainly at a nontranscriptional level. Hence, IL-4 selectively down-regulates the CD20 epitope recognized by clone L27 without affecting seven other different epitopes, indicating that IL-4 acts by modifying the conformation of the CD20 molecule rather than by inhibiting its production or inducing its internalization. IL-4 most likely utilizes a protein kinase C-independent signal transduction pathway to modify CD20 molecule inasmuch as staurosporine, an inhibitor of protein kinase C, antagonizes phorbol esters (PMA) but not IL-4-induced CD20 down-regulation. In contrast, anti-CD40 mAb reverses the IL-4 but not the PMA inhibitory effect on CD20 expression. Given that CD20 may be part of a Ca2+ ion channel and plays a role in B cell activation and proliferation, it is proposed that the ability of anti-CD40 mAb to maintain the CD20 molecule in a given epitopic configuration on IL-4-stimulated B cells may be related to the long term proliferation of normal B cells that are strictly dependent on the presence of IL-4 and cross-linked anti-CD40 mAb for their continuous growth.
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