Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (lymphopenia)
4,859 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Expression and signalling through the pre-TCR and the TCRalphabeta resemble two critical checkpoints during T cell development. We investigated to which extent a pre-TCR can functionally replace mature TCRalpha chains during T cell development. For this purpose, transgenic mice were generated expressing the pre-TCRalpha (pTalpha) under the transcriptional control of TCRbeta regulatory elements. We report here on the interesting finding that constitutive pTalpha expression allows complete T cell maturation. The pre-TCR complex permits a subset of beta-selected thymocytes to mature in the absence of TCRalpha into peripheral T cells (betaT cells) comprising up to 10% of all lymphocytes. Lymphopenia-driven proliferation of these betaT cells is similar to that of conventional alphabetaT cells. Furthermore, betaT cells proliferated and acquired effector function upon stimulation with allogeneic MHC.
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PMID:Constitutive expression of the pre-TCR enables development of mature T cells. 1664 Nov 11

T cells undergoing lymphopenia-driven proliferation acquire effector and memory properties that can be pathogenic. Indeed, generalized lymphopenia is associated with a variety of autoimmune diseases such as type 1 diabetes. The current study was carried out to determine how CD8(+) T cells undergoing acute lymphopenic expansion respond to antigen under tolerizing conditions in vivo. Adoptive transfer of diabetes by TCR-transgenic CD8(+) T cells was enhanced following treatment of NOD. scid recipients with a high dose of soluble peptide. Furthermore, whereas TCR-transgenic CD8(+) T cells underwent clonal deletion and failed to differentiate into CTL in peptide-treated lymphoreplete recipient mice, TCR-transgenic CD8(+) T cells in a lymphopenic environment were resistant to clonal deletion, and CTL differentiation was enhanced by a high dose of soluble peptide. Moreover, peptide treatment had distinct effects on expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-X(L) in TCR-transgenic CD8(+) T cells under lymphopenic versus lymphoreplete conditions. These results demonstrate that CD8(+) T cells undergoing lymphopenia-driven expansion in NOD. scid recipients are resistant to antigen-induced tolerance, and readily differentiate into CTL upon stimulation with a high dose of soluble peptide.
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PMID:Lymphopenia-driven CD8(+) T cells are resistant to antigen-induced tolerance in NOD.scid mice. 1682 Dec 36

Humans lacking the CD3gamma subunit of the pre-TCR and TCR complexes exhibit a mild alphabeta T lymphopenia, but have normal T cells. By contrast, CD3gamma-deficient mice are almost devoid of mature alphabeta T cells due to an early block of intrathymic development at the CD4(-)CD8(-) double-negative (DN) stage. This suggests that in humans but not in mice, the highly related CD3delta chain replaces CD3gamma during alphabeta T-cell development. To determine whether human CD3delta (hCD3delta) functions in a similar manner in the mouse in the absence of CD3gamma, we introduced an hCD3delta transgene in mice that were deficient for both CD3delta and CD3gamma, in which thymocyte development is completely arrested at the DN stage. Expression of hCD3delta efficiently supported pre-TCR-mediated progression from the DN to the CD4(+)CD8(+) double-positive (DP) stage. However, alphabetaTCR-mediated positive and negative thymocyte selection was less efficient than in wild-type mice, which correlated with a marked attenuation of TCR-mediated signaling. Of note, murine CD3gamma-deficient TCR complexes that had incorporated hCD3delta displayed abnormalities in structural stability resembling those of T cells from CD3gamma-deficient humans. Taken together, these data demonstrate that CD3delta and CD3gamma play a different role in humans and mice in pre-TCR and TCR function during alphabeta T-cell development.
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PMID:Overlapping functions of human CD3delta and mouse CD3gamma in alphabeta T-cell development revealed in a humanized CD3gamma-mouse. 1688 97

Although recent work has suggested that lymphopenia-induced homeostatic proliferation may improve T cell-mediated tumor rejection, there is little direct evidence isolating homeostatic proliferation as an experimental variable, and the mechanism by which improved antitumor immunity occurs via homeostatic proliferation is poorly understood. An adoptive transfer model was developed in which tumor-specific 2C/RAG2(-/-) TCR transgenic CD8+ T cells were introduced either into the lymphopenic environment of RAG2(-/-) mice or into P14/RAG2(-/-) mice containing an irrelevant CD8+ TCR transgenic population. RAG2(-/-), but not P14/RAG2(-/-) recipients supported homeostatic proliferation of transferred T cells as well as tumor rejection. Despite absence of tumor rejection in P14/RAG2(-/-) recipients, 2C cells did become activated, as reflected by CFSE dilution and CD44 up-regulation. However, these cells showed poor IFN-gamma and IL-2 production upon restimulation, consistent with T cell anergy and similar to the hyporesponsiveness induced by administration of soluble peptide Ag. To determine whether homeostatic proliferation could uncouple T cell anergy, anergic 2C cells were transferred into RAG(-/-) recipients, which resulted in vigorous homeostatic proliferation, recovery of IL-2 production, and acquisition of the ability to reject tumors. Taken together, our data suggest that a major mechanism by which homeostatic proliferation supports tumor rejection is by maintaining and/or re-establishing T cell responsiveness.
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PMID:Homeostatic proliferation as an isolated variable reverses CD8+ T cell anergy and promotes tumor rejection. 1698 89

Systemic administration of high doses of soluble Ag induces peripheral CD4+ T cell tolerance in unmanipulated hosts. To test whether tolerance is modified under conditions of transient lymphopenia, we tracked the response of 5C.C7 TCR-transgenic CD4+ T cells to i.v. moth cytochrome c peptide in mice that received low-dose gamma irradiation 10 days previously. This model was chosen because it does not support spontaneous lymphopenia-induced proliferation of 5C.C7 cells, allowing the study of Ag-specific responses without interference from simultaneous spontaneous proliferation. Clonal expansion in response to i.v. peptide was increased in irradiated mice, while clonal deletion was severely impaired in comparison with untreated animals. Amplified TCR triggering was observed in irradiated hosts, consistent with dendritic cell activation leading to enhanced Ag presentation. Failure of deletion was accompanied by persistent T cell activation and accumulation of Th1 effector cells. Up-regulated expression of IL-7R and the prosurvival protein Bcl-x(L) was associated with clonal persistence. Cells with memory and naive phenotypes were both represented within persistent clones, but no Th1 function could be demonstrated within the long-term memory population. Failure of clonal deletion in irradiated hosts represents a novel mechanism limiting TCR diversity in a lymphopenic environment and may contribute to subsequent autoimmunity.
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PMID:Severely impaired clonal deletion of CD4+ T cells in low-dose irradiated mice: role of T cell antigen receptor and IL-7 receptor signals. 1714 28

Naive CD4 cells from aged mice respond inefficiently to Ag, but the factors that underlie the age-associated defects remain unclear. We have used two approaches to isolate recent thymic emigrants (RTE) in young and aged mice and have compared their capacity to respond to antigenic stimulation ex vivo. An in situ intrathymic CFSE injection labeled developing thymocytes and allowed the identification of RTE in secondary lymphoid tissues. Analysis of CFSE-labeled RTE and control unlabeled naive CD4 cells indicated that cells from aged mice were defective in their ability to increase intracellular Ca(2+) concentration following TCR cross-linking. Aged naive and RTE CD4 also secreted less IL-2 and proliferated less than that of comparable young CD4 populations. Defects in effector generation in aged RTE were overcome by the addition of IL-2 to cultures. RTE from both polyclonal and TCR transgenic mice were compromised, indicating that defects were independent of TCR specificity. In the second model, the cotransfer of congenic marker-labeled young and aged BM cells into young and aged syngeneic hosts revealed that hyporesponsiveness in aged RTE was caused by a combination of defects intrinsic to CD4 progenitors and defects induced by the aged environment. Depletion of peripheral CD4 cells in aged mice led to production of new RTE that were not defective. The results of this study suggest that defects induced by environmental and lineage intrinsic factors act together to reduce responses to Ag in aged naive CD4 cells and that these defects can be overcome in aged CD4 cells produced during recovery from lymphopenia.
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PMID:Environmental and intrinsic factors lead to antigen unresponsiveness in CD4(+) recent thymic emigrants from aged mice. 1723 78

CD137-mediated signals costimulate T cells and protect them from activation-induced apoptosis; they induce curative antitumor immunity and enhance antiviral immune responses in mice. In contrast, anti-CD137 agonistic mAbs can suppress T-dependent humoral immunity and reverse the course of established autoimmune disease. These results have provided a rationale for assessing the therapeutic potential of CD137 ligands in human clinical trials. In this study, we report that a single 200-mug injection of anti-CD137 given to otherwise naive BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice led to the development of a series of immunological anomalies. These included splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, multifocal hepatitis, anemia, altered trafficking of B cells and CD8 T cells, loss of NK cells, and a 10-fold increase in bone marrow (BM) cells bearing the phenotype of hemopoietic stem cells. These events were dependent on CD8 T cells, TNF-alpha, IFN-gamma, and type I IFNs. BM cells up-regulated Fas, and there was a significant increase in the number of CD8+ T cells that correlated with a loss of CD19+ and Ab-secreting cells in the BM. TCR Valphabeta usage was random and polyclonal among liver-infiltrating CD8 T cells, and multifocal CD8+ T cell infiltrates were resolved upon termination of anti-CD137 treatment. Anti-CD137-treated mice developed lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, and anemia, and had lowered levels of hemoglobin and increased numbers of reticulocytes.
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PMID:Cytokine-mediated disruption of lymphocyte trafficking, hemopoiesis, and induction of lymphopenia, anemia, and thrombocytopenia in anti-CD137-treated mice. 1737 76

Recognition of peptide-MHC by the TCR induces T lymphocytes to undergo cell division. Although recognition of foreign peptide induces a program of cellular division and differentiation by responding T cells, stimulation by self-peptide MHC complexes in lymphopenic conditions induces a slower burst of divisions that may or may not be accompanied by effector differentiation. Although both responses are triggered by signals from the TCR, it is not known whether they represent distinct programs of cell cycle control. In this study, we use a mathematical modeling approach to analyze the proliferative response of TCR transgenic F5 T cells to lymphopenia. We tested two fundamentally different models of cell division: one in which T cells are triggered into an "autopilot" deterministic burst of divisions, a model successfully used elsewhere to describe T cell responses to cognate Ag, and a second contrasting model in which cells undergo independent single stochastic divisions. Whereas the autopilot model provided a very poor description of the F5 T cell responses to lymphopenia, the model of single stochastic divisions fitted the experimental data remarkably closely. Furthermore, this model proved robust because specific predictions of cellular behavior made by this model concerning the onset, rate, and nature of division were successfully validated experimentally. Our results suggest cell division induced by lymphopenia involves a process of single stochastic divisions, which is best suited to a homeostatic rather than differentiation role.
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PMID:Mathematical modeling reveals the biological program regulating lymphopenia-induced proliferation. 1820 36

The transmembrane adaptor protein SIT is a negative regulator of TCR-mediated signaling. However, little is known about the functional role of SIT in mature T cells. In this study, we show that mice deficient for SIT display a decreased number of naive CD8(+) T cells and a progressive accumulation of memory-like (CD44(high)) CD8(+) T lymphocytes that resemble cells undergoing homeostatic proliferation. Indeed, when transferred into lymphopenic hosts, SIT(-/-) naive CD8(+) T cells undergo enhanced homeostatic proliferation and express a higher level of CD44 in comparison to wild-type T cells. By using class-I-restricted TCR transgenic models with different ligand affinity/avidity, we show that lymphopenia-induced homeostatic proliferation is more pronounced in cells carrying low-affinity TCRs. Strikingly, the loss of SIT induces homeostatic proliferation of HY TCR transgenic cells, which are normally unable to proliferate in lymphopenic mice. Collectively, these data demonstrate that SIT negatively regulates T cell homeostasis. Finally, we show that SIT-deficient T cells develop a mechanism analogous to sensory adaptation as they up-regulate CD5, down-regulate the coreceptor, and display impaired TCR-mediated ZAP-70 activation.
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PMID:Regulation of T cell homeostasis by the transmembrane adaptor protein SIT. 1820 59

Inducing lymphopenia before adoptive cell transfer can improve the antitumor effect of donor immune cells. It was recently reported that lymphopenic conditions can initiate the differentiation of naive T cells into effector cells. Although T cells require a specific "strong" signal via TCR as well as costimulatory signals during Ag-driven differentiation, there has been little evidence to suggest any requirement for costimulatory signaling for the differentiation of naive T cells in a lymphopenic host. In this study, we demonstrate that naive CD8(+) T cells are indispensable for induction of antitumor effect, and, in addition to Ag-driven differentiation, CD28 signaling is essential for the differentiation of naive CD8(+) T cells into functional effector CTLs during homeostatic proliferation (HP). The systemic administration of IL-2 did not restore the antitumor effect induced by HP in the absence of CD28 signaling. These results suggest that homeostatic cytokines enable CD8(+) T cells to expand and survive, and that TCR and the CD28 signal initiate the differentiation of effector functions. A deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying enhanced induction of the antitumor immune response with accompanying HP may allow us to more precisely induce enhanced immunity with costimulation signaling and the administration of common gamma-chain cytokines.
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PMID:Induction of antitumor immune response by homeostatic proliferation and CD28 signaling. 1835 82


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