Biliary glycoprotein (CD66a), a cell adhesion molecule of the immunoglobulin superfamily, on human lymphocytes: structure, expression and involvement in T cell activation

Abstract
The biliary glycoproteins (BGP or CD66a), a group of different splice variants of a single gene, are members of the carcinoembryonic antigen family and the immunoglobulin superfamily. Recently, we detected CD66a on IL-2 activated lymphocytes. In this study we characterized the structure and the expression pattern of BGP on human lymphocytes and investigated its role in T cell activation. Lymphocytes express 2 of the 13 known splice variants, i.e. BGPa and BGPb, which are glycosylated in a lymphocyte-specific manner. Both BGPa and BGPb have the long cytoplasmic tail, which contains two immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibitory motif (ITIM)-like motifs, but differ in their extracellular region containing 4 and 3 immunoglobulin-like domains, respectively. On PBL BGP is expressed in small amounts only on B cells and Th cells. Stimulation with IL-2 leads to a strong up-regulation of BGP by these cells, and induces de novo BGP expression on γ δ T cells, CD8+ and CD56+ cells, but not on CD16+ lymphocytes. This up-regulation of BGP seems to be part of the physiological process of T cell activation, since stimulation with anti-CD3 mAb is sufficient to induce BGP up-regulation. Based on the presence of the two ITIM-like motifs, one may expect that BGP inhibits T cell activation, but surprisingly, engagement of BGP enhances the proliferation of anti-CD3-stimulated T cells.