Interleukin‐2 (IL‐2) Receptor α, β and γ Subunit Expression as a Function of B‐Cell Lineage Ontogeny: the Use of IL‐2‐PE664Glu to Characterize Internalization via IL‐2 Receptor Subunits

Abstract
Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a pluripotent cytokine which plays a crucial role in the immune system response. Although the IL-2/IL-2 receptor (IL-2R) system has been well characterized in cells of the T lineage it is less known in B lymphocytes. The authors therefore studied the expression of the IL-2R alpha, beta and gamma subunits in human B-cell lines at different stages of maturation, by the polymerase chain reaction technique. The authors found that the alpha and beta subunits are expressed in the final stages of B-cell lineage maturation, whereas the gamma subunit is constitutively expressed during B-lymphocyte differentiation. The results indicate that the IL-2/IL-2R system, most probably, does not have a role in the early stages of B-cell differentiation, but may be involved only in the final stages of B-cell lineage ontogeny. Moreover, the ability of the different forms of IL-2R to internalize the IL-2 ligand was investigated, using the chimeric protein IL-2-PE66(4Glu). Cell lines bearing the alphagamma, betagamma and alpha betagamma forms of IL-2R were inhibited by the chimeric protein, while those bearing the gamma subunit alone did not respond to the chimera. Thus, internalization of IL-2 is most likely mediated via the alphagamma form of the IL-2R, as shown here for the first time, as well as through the betagamma and alpha betagamma IL-2R forms. However, IL-2 cannot be internalized through the IL-2R gamma subunit alone.