IFN-mediated induction of MHC antigen expression on human keratinocytes and its influence on in vitro alloimmune responses.

The MHC Ag expression on the surface of keratinocytes is altered after treatment with IFN. IFN-gamma induces, as expected, a strong increase in class I MHC Ag expression as well as de novo expression of class II MHC Ag, whereas IFN-alpha 2 only slightly increases class I MHC Ag and does not induce keratinocytes to express class II MHC Ag. We used untreated and IFN-pretreated keratinocytes as stimulators and also as targets to study whether IFN-induced MHC Ag changes would alter the immunogenicity of keratinocytes in alloimmune responses. It was found that class II MHC Ag-carrying keratinocytes were unable to induce the proliferation of resting lymphocytes, but did stimulate T blasts. Untreated keratinocytes were virtually resistant to the lysis by classical CTL but became susceptible after exposure to IFN-gamma, but not IFN-alpha 2 at physiologic doses. These data demonstrate mechanisms by which the release of IFN-gamma might contribute to the development of disease such as the graft vs host disease.