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Publication : The Secreted Form of Transmembrane Protein 98 Promotes the Differentiation of T Helper 1 Cells.

First Author  Fu W Year  2015
Journal  J Interferon Cytokine Res Volume  35
Issue  9 Pages  720-33
PubMed ID  25946230 Mgi Jnum  J:273519
Mgi Id  MGI:6294180 Doi  10.1089/jir.2014.0110
Citation  Fu W, et al. (2015) The Secreted Form of Transmembrane Protein 98 Promotes the Differentiation of T Helper 1 Cells. J Interferon Cytokine Res 35(9):720-33
abstractText  Cytokines mediate the interaction of immune cells. Discovery of novel potential cytokines is of great value for both basic research and clinical application. In this study, we identified a novel immune-related molecule, transmembrane protein 98 (TMEM98), through a high-throughput screening platform for novel potential cytokines at a genome-wide level using the strategy of immunogenomics. So far, there is no characteristic and immune-related functional report about it. In this study, we demonstrate that TMEM98 exists as a type II transmembrane protein both in the ectopically and endogenously expressed systems. Interestingly, TMEM98 could also be secreted through exosomes. Moreover, the native secreted form of TMEM98 could be detected in the supernatants of activated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and mouse CD4(+) T cells. Further expression profile analysis showed TMEM98 was upregulated during the activation and differentiation of T helper (Th) 1 cells. Function analysis showed that eukaryotic recombinant TMEM98 (rTMEM98) promoted the differentiation of Th1 cells under both antigen-nonspecific and antigen-specific Th1-skewing conditions. These findings were further confirmed in vivo as prokaryotic rTMEM98 administration significantly increased antigen-specific IFN-gamma production and serum antigen-specific IgG2a in the methylated bovine serum albumin-induced delayed-type hypersensitivity model. Overall, these observations emphasize the characteristics and essential roles of TMEM98 for the first time and will be helpful in further understanding the development of Th1 cells.
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