Abstract
CD80 (B7-1) and CD86 (B7-2) on APC provide a major costimulatory signal through interactions with CD28 on T cells. Absent from resting human T cells, CD86 is up-regulated early upon T cell activation, whereas CD80 expression appears later. Whereas T cell expression of CD80 has been implicated in costimulation, the functional significance of CD86 expression on T cells is unclear. We now demonstrate that CD86 expressed on human CD4+ T cell clones does not provide a costimulatory signal for other CD4+ T cell clones. Binding studies using CD28-Ig and CTLA-4-Ig fusion proteins demonstrate that CD86 expressed on T cells has significantly reduced binding affinity for CTLA-4 and no detectable binding to CD28. Biochemical analysis demonstrates that post-translational modifications of CD86 in human T cells are different from those of CD86-transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells or EBV-transformed B cells, in that T cells express a hypoglycosylated form of CD86 on the surface membrane. Thus, our results suggest that while CD86 is expressed on a number of different cell types, its costimulatory function and affinity for its ligands may be regulated by cell type-specific post-translational modifications.