例如:"lncRNA", "apoptosis", "WRKY"

CD3ζ-chain expression of human T lymphocytes is regulated by TNF via Src-like adaptor protein-dependent proteasomal degradation.

J. Immunol.2012 Aug 15;189(4):1602-10. Epub 2012 Jul 13
Barbara Érsek 1 , Viktor Molnár , Andrea Balogh , János Matkó , Andrew P Cope , Edit I Buzás , András Falus , György Nagy
Barbara Érsek 1 , Viktor Molnár , Andrea Balogh , János Matkó , Andrew P Cope , Edit I Buzás , András Falus , György Nagy
+ et al

[No authors listed]

Author information
  • 1 Department of Genetics, Cell, and Immunobiology, Faculty of Medicine, Semmelweis University, 1089 Budapest, Hungary.

摘要


Decreased expression of the TCR ζ-chain has been reported in several autoimmune, inflammatory, and malignant diseases, suggesting that ζ-chain downregulation is common at sites of chronic inflammation. Although ζ-chain is critically important in T lymphocyte activation, the mechanism of the decreased ζ-chain expression is less clear. Src-like adaptor protein (SLAP) is a master regulator of T cell activation; previous data have reported that SLAP regulates immunoreceptor signaling. We have examined the mechanism and the functional consequences of CD3 ζ-chain downregulation. TNF treatment of human T lymphocytes (15-40 ng/ml) selectively downregulates CD3 ζ-chain expression in a dose-dependent manner (p < 0.05) and decreases activation-induced IL-2 expression (p < 0.01). Although blocking of the lysosomal compartment fails to restore TNF-induced CD3 ζ-chain downregulation, inhibition of the proteasome prevented the effect of TNF. Both SLAP expression and the colocalization of SLAP with CD3 ζ-chain was enhanced by TNF treatment (p < 0.05 and p < 0.01, respectively), whereas TNF-induced ζ-chain downregulation was inhibited by gene silencing of SLAP with small interfering RNA. SLAP levels of the CD4(+) T lymphocytes isolated from patients with rheumatoid arthritis were more than 2-fold higher than that of the healthy donors' (p < 0.05); moreover, TNF treatment did not alter the SLAP expression of the CD4(+) cells of anti-TNF therapy-treated patients. Our present data suggest that TNF modulates T cell activation during inflammatory processes by regulating the amount of CD3 ζ-chain expression via a SLAP-dependent mechanism. These data provide evidence for SLAP-dependent regulation of CD3 ζ-chain in the fine control of TCR signaling.