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Publication : T cell receptor zeta reconstitution fails to restore responses of T cells rendered hyporesponsive by tumor necrosis factor alpha.

First Author  Clark JM Year  2004
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  101
Issue  6 Pages  1696-701
PubMed ID  14745016 Mgi Jnum  J:88150
Mgi Id  MGI:3029603 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0308231100
Citation  Clark JM, et al. (2004) T cell receptor zeta reconstitution fails to restore responses of T cells rendered hyporesponsive by tumor necrosis factor alpha. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 101(6):1696-701
abstractText  Expression and function of the antigen T cell receptor (TCR) play a central role in regulating immune responsiveness. Accordingly, targeting the expression of TCRalphabeta or its associated CD3 subunits profoundly influences T cell development and adaptive immunity. Down-regulation of the invariant TCRzeta chain has been documented in a wide variety of chronic inflammatory and infectious diseases, and is thought to contribute to the paradoxical immune suppression observed in these diseases. Previously, we reported that prolonged exposure of T cell hybridoma clones to tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) induces nondeletional and reversible hyporesponsiveness to TCR engagement, associated with down-regulation of TCRzeta chain expression, impaired TCR/CD3 complex assembly, and attenuation of TCR-induced membrane proximal tyrosine phosphorylation. Here, we have tested whether receptor specific T cell responses are rescued in TNF-treated T cell hybridomas by retroviral-mediated expression of zeta-chimeric (C2zeta) receptors or wild-type TCRzeta. Expression of C2zeta receptors at the cell surface is relatively refractory to chronic TNF stimulation. However, C2zeta receptor function depends on association with endogenous TCRzeta chains, whose expression is down-regulated by TNF, and so C2 receptor specific responses are attenuated in TNF-treated T cells. Unexpectedly, overexpression of wild-type TCRzeta maintains cell surface TCR/CD3 complex expression but fails to rescue receptor proximal signaling in TNF-treated T cells, suggesting the existence of hitherto unrecognized mechanisms through which TNF regulates T cell responsiveness. We provide additional evidence that TNF also uncouples distal TCR signaling pathways independently of its effects on TCRzeta expression.
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