|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Dominant Negative FADD/MORT1 Inhibits the Development of Intestinal Intraepithelial Lymphocytes With a Marked Defect on CD8αα+TCRγδ+ T Cells.

First Author  Zhang X Year  2018
Journal  Front Immunol Volume  9
Pages  2038 PubMed ID  30250469
Mgi Jnum  J:295700 Mgi Id  MGI:6454245
Doi  10.3389/fimmu.2018.02038 Citation  Zhang X, et al. (2018) Dominant Negative FADD/MORT1 Inhibits the Development of Intestinal Intraepithelial Lymphocytes With a Marked Defect on CD8alphaalpha+TCRgammadelta+ T Cells. Front Immunol 9:2038
abstractText  Intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IELs) play a critical role in mucosal immune system, which differ from thymus-derived cells and develop locally in gut. Although the development of IELs has been studied in some detail, the molecular cues controlling their local development remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that FADD, a classic adaptor protein required for death-receptor-induced apoptosis, is a critical regulator of the intestinal IEL development. The mice with a dominant negative mutant of FADD (FADD-DN) display an abnormal development of intestinal IELs with a marked reduction in the numbers of CD8alphaalpha(+)TCRgammadelta(+) T cells. As a precursor for CD8alphaalpha(+) development, lamina propria lymphocytes in lin-negative expression (lin(-) LPLs) were analyzed and the massive accumulation of IL-7R(-)lin(-) LPLs was observed in FADD-DN mice. As IL-7R is one of Notch1-target genes, we further observed that the level of Notch1 expression was lower in Lin(-) LPLs from FADD-DN mice compared with normal mice. The downregulation of Notch1 expression induced by FADD-DN overexpression was also confirmed in Jurkat T cells. Considering that IL-7 and its receptor IL7-R play a differentiation inducing role in the development of intestinal IELs, the influence of FADD via its DD domain on Notch1 expression might be a possible molecular signal involved in the early IELs development. In addition, loss of gammadelta T-IELs in FADD-DN mice aggravates DSS-induced colitis, suggesting that FADD is a relevant contribution to the field of mucosal immunology and intestinal homeostasis.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

1 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression