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Publication : Unexpected role of B and T lymphocyte attenuator in sustaining cell survival during chronic allostimulation.

First Author  Hurchla MA Year  2007
Journal  J Immunol Volume  178
Issue  10 Pages  6073-82
PubMed ID  17475832 Mgi Jnum  J:331613
Mgi Id  MGI:7388706 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.178.10.6073
Citation  Hurchla MA, et al. (2007) Unexpected role of B and T lymphocyte attenuator in sustaining cell survival during chronic allostimulation. J Immunol 178(10):6073-82
abstractText  B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA; CD272) can deliver inhibitory signals to B and T cells upon binding its ligand herpesvirus entry mediator. Because CD28, CTLA-4, programmed death-1, and ICOS regulate the development of acute graft-vs-host disease (GVHD), we wished to assess if BTLA also played a role in this T cell-mediated response. In the nonirradiated parental-into-F1 model of acute GVHD, BTLA+/+ and BTLA-/- donor lymphocytes showed equivalent engraftment and expansion during the first week of the alloresponse. Unexpectedly, BTLA-/- donor T cells failed to sustain GVHD, showing a decline in surviving donor cell numbers beginning at day 9 and greatly reduced by day 11. Similarly, inhibition of BTLA-herpesvirus entry mediator engagement by in vivo administration of a blocking anti-BTLA Ab also caused reduced survival of donor cells. Microarray analysis revealed several genes that were differentially expressed by BTLA-/- and BTLA+/+ donor CD4+ T cells preceding the decline in BTLA-/- donor T cells. Several genes influencing Th cell polarization were differentially expressed by BTLA+/+ and BTLA-/- donor cells. Additionally, the re-expression of the IL-7Ralpha subunit that occurs in BTLA+/+ donor cells after 1 wk of in vivo allostimulation was not observed in BTLA-/- donor CD4+ cells. The striking loss of BTLA-/- T cells in this model indicates a role for BTLA activity in sustaining CD4+ T cell survival under the conditions of chronic stimulation in the nonirradiated parental-into-F1 GVHD.
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