scholarly journals Regulation of T cell dependent immune responses by TIM family members

2005 ◽  
Vol 360 (1461) ◽  
pp. 1681-1685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Mariat ◽  
Alberto Sánchez-Fueyo ◽  
Sophoclis P Alexopoulos ◽  
James Kenny ◽  
Terry B Strom ◽  
...  

The T cell immunoglobulin mucin (TIM) proteins are type I membrane glycoproteins expressed on T cells and containing common structural motifs. While our understanding on the distribution and functions of TIM family members is still incomplete, data from several recent reports indicate that these proteins, together with T cell receptor and costimulatory signals, regulate the expansion and effector functions of T helper cells. In the current review, we provide evidences indicating that TIM-3 is capable of modulating the function of CD4 + CD25 + regulatory T cells and inhibiting aggressive Th1 mediated auto- and allo-immune responses. Similarly, additional data suggest that TIM-2 molecules function by negatively regulating Th2 immune responses. In contrast, TIM-1 appears to be an activation molecule for all T cells, although the mechanisms through which TIM-1 activates T cells remain to be elicited.

2003 ◽  
Vol 197 (7) ◽  
pp. 899-906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Krug ◽  
Ravi Veeraswamy ◽  
Andrew Pekosz ◽  
Osami Kanagawa ◽  
Emil R. Unanue ◽  
...  

Interferon-producing cells (IPCs) secrete high levels of type I interferon in response to certain viruses. The lack of lineage markers, the expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II and the capacity to stimulate allogeneic T cells have led these cells to be classified as a subset of dendritic cells (DCs), called plasmacytoid DCs (PDCs). However, the role of IPCs/PDCs in initiating primary immune responses remains elusive. Here we examined the antigen presenting capacity of murine IPCs in antigen specific systems. While CD8α+ and CD11b+ DCs induced logarithmic expansion of naive CD4 and CD8 T cells, without conferring T helper commitment at a first encounter, primary IPCs lacked the ability to stimulate naive T cells. However, when antigen-experienced, nonpolarized T cells expanded by classical DC subsets, were restimulated by IPCs, they proliferated and produced high amounts of IFN-γ. These data indicate that IPCs can effectively stimulate preactivated or memory-type T cells and exert an immune-regulatory role. They also suggest that expansion of naive T cells and acquisition of effector function during antigen-specific T cell responses may involve different antigen-presenting cell (APC) types. Independent and coordinated control of T cell proliferation and differentiation would provide the immune system with greater flexibility in regulating immune responses.


1999 ◽  
Vol 190 (5) ◽  
pp. 607-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideki Iijima ◽  
Ichiro Takahashi ◽  
Daisuke Kishi ◽  
Jin-Kyung Kim ◽  
Sunao Kawano ◽  
...  

T cell receptor α chain–deficient (TCR-α−/−) mice are known to spontaneously develop inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The colitis that develops in these mice is associated with increased numbers of T helper cell (Th)2-type CD4+TCR-ββ (CD4+ββ) T cells producing predominantly interleukin (IL)-4. To investigate the role of these Th2-type CD4+ββ T cells, we treated TCR-α−/− mice with anti–IL-4 monoclonal antibody (mAb). Approximately 60% of TCR-α−/− mice, including those treated with mock Ab and those left untreated, spontaneously developed IBD. However, anti–IL-4 mAb–treated mice exhibited no clinical or histological signs of IBD, and their levels of mucosal and systemic Ab responses were lower than those of mock Ab–treated mice. Although TCR-α−/− mice treated with either specific or mock Ab developed CD4+ββ T cells, only those treated with anti–IL-4 mAb showed a decrease in Th2-type cytokine production at the level of mRNA and protein and an increase in interferon γ–specific expression. These findings suggest that IL-4–producing Th2-type CD4+ββ T cells play a major immunopathological role in the induction of IBD in TCR-α−/− mice, a role that anti–IL-4 mAb inhibits by causing Th2-type CD4+ββ T cells to shift to the Th1 type.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (66) ◽  
Author(s):  
Puspa Thapa ◽  
Rebecca S. Guyer ◽  
Alexander Y. Yang ◽  
Christopher A. Parks ◽  
Todd M. Brusko ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (18) ◽  
pp. 4323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvo Danilo Lombardo ◽  
Emanuela Mazzon ◽  
Maria Sofia Basile ◽  
Giorgia Campo ◽  
Federica Corsico ◽  
...  

Tetraspanins are a conserved family of proteins involved in a number of biological processes including, cell–cell interactions, fertility, cancer metastasis and immune responses. It has previously been shown that TSPAN32 knockout mice have normal hemopoiesis and B-cell responses, but hyperproliferative T cells. Here, we show that TSPAN32 is expressed at higher levels in the lymphoid lineage as compared to myeloid cells. In vitro activation of T helper cells via anti-CD3/CD28 is associated with a significant downregulation of TSPAN32. Interestingly, engagement of CD3 is sufficient to modulate TSPAN32 expression, and its effect is potentiated by costimulation with anti-CD28, but not anti-CTLA4, -ICOS nor -PD1. Accordingly, we measured the transcriptomic levels of TSPAN32 in polarized T cells under Th1 and Th2 conditions and TSPAN32 resulted significantly reduced as compared with unstimulated cells. On the other hand, in Treg cells, TSPAN32 underwent minor changes upon activation. The in vitro data were finally translated into the context of multiple sclerosis (MS). Encephalitogenic T cells from Myelin Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein (MOG)-Induced Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE) mice showed significantly lower levels of TSPAN32 and increased levels of CD9, CD53, CD82 and CD151. Similarly, in vitro-activated circulating CD4 T cells from MS patients showed lower levels of TSPAN32 as compared with cells from healthy donors. Overall, these data suggest an immunoregulatory role for TSPAN32 in T helper immune response and may represent a target of future immunoregulatory therapies for T cell-mediated autoimmune diseases.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (4) ◽  
pp. 1195-1204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bence Rethi ◽  
Nancy Vivar ◽  
Stefano Sammicheli ◽  
Caroline Fluur ◽  
Nicolas Ruffin ◽  
...  

Abstract T-cell depletion associated with HIV infection or cytoreductive therapies triggers potential T-cell regenerative mechanisms such as peripheral T-lymphocyte expansion to weak antigenic stimuli and the increased availability of interleukin-7 (IL-7), a cytokine with potent antiapoptotic and proliferative activities. Deleterious mechanisms also associated with lymphopenia, such as increased Fas expression and apoptosis of T cell, however, may result in opposing effects. In this study, we show that Fas molecules, primarily associated with T-cell depletion in lymphopenic settings, may also contribute to compensatory T-cell expansion through transmitting costimulatory signals to suboptimally activated T cells. Proliferation of T lymphocytes in response to concomitant Fas and T-cell receptor (TCR) triggering was shown to be increased in HIV-infected individuals compared with noninfected controls. As IL-7 levels are often elevated in lymphopenic individuals in association with increased Fas expression, we analyzed whether IL-7 would influence Fas-mediated proliferative signals in T cells. We show that IL-7 is able to increase the efficacy of Fas to induce proliferation of suboptimally activated T cells. Thus, high IL-7 levels associated with lymphopenic conditions may simultaneously induce sensitivity to Fas-mediated apoptosis in nonactivated T cells and increase Fas-induced costimulatory signals in T cells recognizing low-affinity antigens.


2008 ◽  
Vol 122 (10) ◽  
pp. 2280-2285 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolin Lüking ◽  
Konrad Kronenberger ◽  
Bernhard Frankenberger ◽  
Elfriede Nößner ◽  
Martin Röcken ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (13) ◽  
pp. 3591-3602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon P. Hilchey ◽  
Alexander F. Rosenberg ◽  
Ollivier Hyrien ◽  
Shelley Secor-Socha ◽  
Matthew R. Cochran ◽  
...  

Abstract The follicular lymphoma (FL) T-cell microenvironment plays a critical role in the biology of this disease. We therefore determined the lineage, differentiation state, and functional potential of FL-infiltrating CD4+ T-helper cells (TH) compared with reactive and normal lymph node (NLN) TH cells. Relative to NLNs, FL cells have decreased proportions of naive and central memory but increased proportions of effector memory TH cells. We further show differences in the distribution and anatomical localization of CXCR5+ TH populations that, on the basis of transcription factor analysis, include both regulatory and follicular helper T cells. On Staphylococcus enterotoxin-B stimulation, which stimulates T cells through the T-cell receptor, requires no processing by APCs, and can overcome regulator T cell-mediated suppression, the proportion of uncommitted primed precursor cells, as well as TH2 and TH17 cells is higher in FL cells than in reactive lymph nodes or NLNs. However, the proportion of TH1 and polyfunctional TH cells (producing multiple cytokines simultaneously) is similar in FL cells and NLNs. These data suggest that, although TH-cell differentiation in FL is skewed compared with NLNs, FL TH cells should have the same intrinsic ability to elicit antitumor effector responses as NLN TH cells when tumor suppressive mechanisms are attenuated.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 1566-1574 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Jain ◽  
E A Nalefski ◽  
P G McCaffrey ◽  
R S Johnson ◽  
B M Spiegelman ◽  
...  

The ubiquitous transcription factors Fos and Jun are rapidly induced in T cells stimulated through the T-cell antigen receptor and regulate transcription of cytokines, including interleukin 2, in activated T cells. Since positive and negative selection of thymocytes during T-cell development also depends on activation through the T-cell receptor, Fos and Jun may play a role in thymocyte development as well. Fos and Jun act at several regulatory elements in the interleukin 2 promoter, including the AP-1 and NFAT sites. Using antisera specific to individual Fos and Jun family members, we show that c-Fos as well as other Fos family members are present in the inducible AP-1 and NFAT complexes of activated murine T cells. Nevertheless, c-Fos is not absolutely required for the development or function of peripheral T cells, as shown by using mice in which both copies of the c-fos gene were disrupted by targeted mutagenesis. c-Fos-deficient mice were comparable to wild-type mice in their patterns of thymocyte development and in the ability of their peripheral T cells to proliferate and produce several cytokines in response to T-cell receptor stimulation. Our results suggest that other Fos family members may be capable of substituting functionally for c-Fos during T-cell development and cytokine gene transcription in activated T cells.


2005 ◽  
Vol 280 (23) ◽  
pp. 21949-21954 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence P. Kane ◽  
Simon C. Watkins

Tec family tyrosine kinases are key regulators of lymphocyte activation and effector function. Several Tec family kinases (Tec, Itk, Rlk/Txk) are expressed in T cells, but it is still not clear to what degree these are redundant or have unique functions. We recently demonstrated that Tec alone, among the Tec kinase family members examined, can induce nuclear factor of activated T cell-dependent transcription. This unique functional characteristic correlated with a unique pattern of subcellular localization, as Tec (but not other family members) was found in small vesicles, the appearance of which requires signaling through the T cell receptor for antigen. Here we report on our studies of these Tec-containing structures in live T cells, using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. With this technique, we showed that, in live T cells, the Tec vesicles are located at the plasma membrane, the vesicles are unique to Tec (and not the related kinase Itk), and their formation and maintenance require T cell receptor signaling through Src family kinases and PI 3-kinase. Finally, we have imaged isolated T cell membranes by confocal microscopy, confirming the membrane-proximal location of Tec vesicles, as well as demonstrating overlap of these vesicles with the tyrosine kinase Lck, the Tec substrate PLC-γ1, and the early endosomal antigen 1 marker EEA1.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1417-1417
Author(s):  
Patrick Adair ◽  
Yong Chan Kim ◽  
Kathleen P. Pratt ◽  
David W Scott

Abstract Engineered T cells are a vital component in the armamentarium of cellular therapies. In this presentation, we examine how human CD4+ T cells, genetically engineered to express a T-cell receptor (TCR) specific for a C2 domain epitope of the coagulation protein cofactor FVIII, can be skewed or polarized to different T-helper subsets. Two TCRs were cloned from Th2 and Th17/Th1 phenotyped CD4+ T cells isolated via a tetramer guided epitope mapping (TGEM) technique from a hemophilia A subject after clinical diagnosis of an inhibitor (neutralizing antibody) to FVIII given as replacement therapy. The two TCRs were cloned using a 5’ RACE with semi-nested PCR and transduced via a retroviral vector into healthy non-hemophilia A human donor CD4+ T cells. Based on proliferation and HLA class II tetramer staining data, engineered CD4+ T cells expressing the different cloned TCRs exhibited different avidities for the same C2 peptide (containing the epitope) over a dose titration curve, despite similar levels of TCR expression on the CD4 T-cell surface. IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-6, and IL-10 cytokine production levels following stimulation with C2 peptide and DR1 antigen presenting cells, as measured by cytokine bead analysis, were significantly greater for the higher avidity TCR, which was cloned from a “Th2” phenotyped CD4+ T-cell clone. Interestingly, neither the engineered CD4+ T cells expressing the Th2 TCR nor the cells expressing the Th17/Th1 TCR produced cytokines characteristic of their respective original parental clones. Rather, they reflected the cytokine profiles of the donor populations used for transduction. These preliminary data led us to investigate how the different avidities of the two cloned TCRs can modulate the T-helper subset skewing/differentiation potential of engineered CD4+T cells. We hypothesized that the TCR is merely a switch that can activate or direct engineered CD4+ T cells to an antigen-specific response that would be skewed to the T-helper phenotypes of the cells prior to TCR transduction. We further hypothesized that this response could be modulated after TCR transduction according to the apparent tetramer avidity of the engineered cells. We successfully skewed the engineered human T-helper cells to Th1, Th2 and Th17 lineages, based on T-helper signature cytokine expression and the transcription factors T-bet, Gata3 and RORγt. Moreover, we observed that TCR transduction into naïve human CD4+ T cells did not itself affect the T-helper subset skewing of the cells. Preliminary experiments showed a trend toward Th2 skewing for the high avidity Th2 CD4+ T cells having an engineered TCR when they were cultured under either Th1 or Th2 polarizing conditions and stimulated with the C2 peptide, compared to the phenotypes obtained following stimulation of polyclonal CD4 T cells with anti-CD3. These studies will improve our designing of engineered TCRs for CD4+T-cell therapy, especially when concerns of T-helper effector function and plasticity are important to clinical outcomes. Supported by NIH RO1-HL061883 (DWS), funding from Bayer and CSL Behring (KPP) and intramural support from NIAID (EMS). We thank Dr. Arthur Thompson (Puget Sound Blood Center) for enrolling patients and we thank all blood donors. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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