Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.1.1.148 (
Thy1
)
1,210
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We recently showed that
2B4
expression on memory T cells in human renal transplant recipients was associated with reduced rates of rejection. To investigate whether
2B4
functionally underlies graft acceptance during transplantation, we established an experimental model in which
2B4
was retrogenically expressed on donor-reactive murine CD8
+
T cells (2B4rg), which were then transferred into naive recipients prior to skin transplantation. We found that constitutive
2B4
expression resulted in significantly reduced accumulation of donor-reactive CD8
+
T cells following transplantation and significantly prolonged graft survival following transplantation. This marked reduction in alloreactivity was due to reduced proliferation of CD8
+
Thy1
.1
+
2B4rg cells as compared with control cells, underpinned by extracellular flux analyses demonstrating that
2B4
-deficient (2B4KO) CD8
+
cells activated in vitro exhibited increased glycolytic capacity and upregulation of gene expression profiles consistent with enhanced glycolytic machinery as compared with wild type controls. Furthermore, 2B4KO CD8
+
T cells primed in vivo exhibited significantly enhanced ex vivo uptake of a fluorescent glucose analogue. Finally, the proliferative advantage associated with
2B4
deficiency was only observed in the setting of glucose sufficiency; in glucose-poor conditions, 2B4KO CD8
+
T cells lost their proliferative advantage. Together, these data indicate that
2B4
signals function to alter T cell glucose metabolism, thereby limiting the proliferation and accumulation of CD8
+
T cells. Targeting
2B4
may therefore represent a novel therapeutic strategy to attenuate unwanted CD8
+
T cell responses.
...
PMID:2B4 Mediates Inhibition of CD8
+
T Cell Responses via Attenuation of Glycolysis and Cell Division. 3001 49