Our study demonstrates the central role for the murine CD40 ligand and IL-2 in contact-dependent T cell help for Ag-specific primary antibody responses in vitro. Helper T cell clones were found to express CD40 ligand after activation with CD3 mAb. Membrane-bound recombinant CD40 ligand expressed on fixed CV1/EBNA cells had similar B cell-activating properties as T cell clones that had been activated and then fixed. These activities include the induction of B cell proliferation, induction of polyclonal secretion of multiple Ig isotypes in a cytokine-dependent manner, and induction of Ag-specific antibody responses by purified B cells. The induction of polyclonal Ig secretion by the recombinant CD40 ligand required IL-4 and IL-5 although optimal Ag-specific antibody formation required IL-2. Finally, soluble CD40.Fc inhibited the induction of Ag-specific antibody responses by fixed, activated Th cell clones. The requirement for both CD40 ligand and IL-2 for induction of Ag-specific antibody responses was mediated, in part, by the induction of B cell IL-2R expression by CD40 ligand. We conclude that the interaction of CD40 on B cells with its ligand on activated T cells is an integral event in the early activation of B cells to grow and differentiate to antibody formation.

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