22 research outputs found

    MicroRNA‐181a restricts human γδ T cell differentiation by targeting Map3k2 and Notch2

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    γδ T cells are a conserved population of lymphocytes that contributes to anti-tumor responses through its overt type 1 inflammatory and cytotoxic properties. We have previously shown that human γδ T cells acquire this profile upon stimulation with IL-2 or IL-15, in a differentiation process dependent on MAPK/ERK signaling. Here, we identify microRNA-181a as a key modulator of human γδ T cell differentiation. We observe that miR-181a is highly expressed in patients with prostate cancer and that this pattern is associated with lower expression of NKG2D, a critical mediator of cancer surveillance. Interestingly, miR-181a expression negatively correlates with an activated type 1 effector profile obtained from in vitro differentiated γδ T cells and miR-181a overexpression restricts their levels of NKG2D and TNF-α. Upon in silico analysis, we identify two miR-181a candidate targets, Map3k2 and Notch2, which we validate via overexpression coupled with luciferase assays. These results reveal a novel role for miR-181a as a critical regulator of human γδ T cell differentiation and highlight its potential for manipulation of γδ T cells in next-generation immunotherapies.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Epithelial and dendritic cells in the thymic medulla promote CD4(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cell development via the CD27-CD70 pathway

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    This work was supported by grants NKI 2004-3087 and NKI 2008-2023 from the Dutch Cancer Society to J. Borst, European Molecular Biology Organization long-term fellowships to J.M. Coquet and J.C. Ribot, a Rubicon (The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research [NWO]) fellowship to J.M. Coquet, and a Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia project grant (PTDC/SAU-MII/104158/2008) and a European Research Council starting grant (StG260352) to B. Silva-Santos. J.F. Neves is funded by the Fundação para a Ciência e Technologia of Portugal; D.J. Pennington is funded by the Wellcome Trust

    A population of proinflammatory T cells coexpresses αβ and γδ T cell receptors in mice and humans

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    T cells are classically recognized as distinct subsets that express αβ or γδ TCRs. We identify a novel population of T cells that coexpress αβ and γδ TCRs in mice and humans. These hybrid αβ-γδ T cells arose in the murine fetal thymus by day 16 of ontogeny, underwent αβ TCR–mediated positive selection into CD4+ or CD8+ thymocytes, and constituted up to 10% of TCRδ+ cells in lymphoid organs. They expressed high levels of IL-1R1 and IL-23R and secreted IFN-γ, IL-17, and GM-CSF in response to canonically restricted peptide antigens or stimulation with IL-1β and IL-23. Hybrid αβ-γδ T cells were transcriptomically distinct from conventional γδ T cells and displayed a hyperinflammatory phenotype enriched for chemokine receptors and homing molecules that facilitate migration to sites of inflammation. These proinflammatory T cells promoted bacterial clearance after infection with Staphylococcus aureus and, by licensing encephalitogenic Th17 cells, played a key role in the development of autoimmune disease in the central nervous system

    TCR signal strength controls thymic differentiation of discrete proinflammatory gamma delta T cell subsets

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    The mouse thymus produces discrete gd T cell subsets that make either interferon-g (IFN-g) or interleukin 17 (IL-17), but the role of the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) in this developmental process remains controversial. Here we show that Cd3g+/− Cd3d+/− (CD3 double-haploinsufficient (CD3DH)) mice have reduced TCR expression and signaling strength on gd T cells. CD3DH mice had normal numbers and phenotypes of ab thymocyte subsets, but impaired differentiation of fetal Vg6+ (but not Vg4+) IL-17- producing gd T cells and a marked depletion of IFN-g-producing CD122+ NK1.1+ gd T cells throughout ontogeny. Adult CD3DH mice showed reduced peripheral IFN-g+ gd T cells and were resistant to experimental cerebral malaria. Thus, TCR signal strength within specific thymic developmental windows is a major determinant of the generation of proinflammatory gd T cell subsets and their impact on pathophysiology

    PLoS Pathog

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    Cytomegalovirus (CMV) is a leading infectious cause of morbidity in immune-compromised patients. γδ T cells have been involved in the response to CMV but their role in protection has not been firmly established and their dependency on other lymphocytes has not been addressed. Using C57BL/6 αβ and/or γδ T cell-deficient mice, we here show that γδ T cells are as competent as αβ T cells to protect mice from CMV-induced death. γδ T cell-mediated protection involved control of viral load and prevented organ damage. γδ T cell recovery by bone marrow transplant or adoptive transfer experiments rescued CD3ε-/- mice from CMV-induced death confirming the protective antiviral role of γδ T cells. As observed in humans, different γδ T cell subsets were induced upon CMV challenge, which differentiated into effector memory cells. This response was observed in the liver and lungs and implicated both CD27+ and CD27- γδ T cells. NK cells were the largely preponderant producers of IFNγ and cytotoxic granules throughout the infection, suggesting that the protective role of γδ T cells did not principally rely on either of these two functions. Finally, γδ T cells were strikingly sufficient to fully protect Rag-/-γc-/- mice from death, demonstrating that they can act in the absence of B and NK cells. Altogether our results uncover an autonomous protective antiviral function of γδ T cells, and open new perspectives for the characterization of a non classical mode of action which should foster the design of new γδ T cell based therapies, especially useful in αβ T cell compromised patients

    Human γδ thymocytes are functionally immature and differentiate into cytotoxic type 1 effector T cells upon IL-2/IL-15 signaling

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    © 2014 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.Cytotoxicity and IFN-γ production by human γδ T cells underlie their potent antitumor functions. However, it remains unclear where and how human γδ T cells acquire these key effector properties. Given the recent disclosure of a major contribution of the thymus to murine γδ T cell functional differentiation, in this study we have analyzed a series of human pediatric thymuses. We found that ex vivo-isolated γδ thymocytes produced negligible IFN-γ and lacked cytolytic activity against leukemia cells. However, these properties were selectively acquired upon stimulation with IL-2 or IL-15, but not IL-4 or IL-7. Unexpectedly, TCR activation was dispensable for these stages of functional differentiation. The effects of IL-2/IL-15 depended on MAPK/ERK signaling and induced de novo expression of the transcription factors T-bet and eomesodermin, as well as the cytolytic enzyme perforin, required for the cytotoxic type 1 program. These findings have implications for the manipulation of γδ T cells in cancer immunotherapy.This work was supported by Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia Grant EXPL/BIM-ONC/0490/2012 and by the Young Investigator Program of the European Molecular Biology Organization

    Inhibition of murine γδ lymphocyte expansion and effector function by regulatory αβ T cells is cell-contact-dependent and sensitive to GITR modulation

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    © 2010 WILEYγδ T cells are highly cytolytic lymphocytes that produce large amounts of pro-inflammatory cytokines during immune responses to multiple pathogens. Furthermore, their ability to kill tumor cells has fueled the development of γδ-T-cell-based cancer therapies. Thus, the regulation of γδ-T-cell activity is of great biological and clinical relevance. Here, we show that murine CD4+CD25+ αβ T cells, the vast majority of which express the Treg marker, Foxp3, abolish key effector functions of γδ T cells, namely the production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines, IFN-γ and IL-17, cytotoxicity, and lymphocyte proliferation in vitro and in vivo. We further show that suppression is dependent on cellular contact between Treg and γδ T cells, results in the induction of an anergic state in γδ lymphocytes, and can be partially reversed by manipulating glucocorticoid-induced TNF receptor-related protein (GITR) signals. Our data collectively dissect a novel mechanism by which the expansion and pro-inflammatory functions of γδ T cells are regulated.This work was supported by grant PTDC/SAU-MII/71662/2006 from Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT), who also provided individual fellowships to J.C.R., A.dB., D.V.C. and I.C., and by an Installation Grant from the European Molecular Biology Organization (YIP Project 1440)

    Foxp3 induction in human and murine thymus precedes the CD4+ CD8+ stage but requires early T-cell receptor expression

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    © 2010 Australasian Society for Immunology Inc. All rights reservedThe thymus generates a T-cell lineage dedicated to immune regulation, 'naturally occurring' regulatory T cells, best specified by the forkhead family transcription factor Foxp3. Here, we have conducted a parallel study in humans and mice where we have dissected the earliest stages of Foxp3 induction during thymocyte development. By analyzing a large collection of 21 human thymuses we show that Foxp3 can be consistently detected in CD4 immature single positive thymocytes that precede the CD4(+)CD8(+) (double positive, DP) stage. The reduced levels of CD3 expression found at this stage of human thymocyte development raise the question of TCR (T-cell receptor) requirement for Foxp3 induction. We further show that, in mice, Foxp3 expression was also detected in pre-DP thymocytes of TCRalpha-sufficient but not in TCRalpha-deficient animals, genetically showing the TCR dependence of Foxp3 expression at pre-DP stages of T-cell development.This work was supported by grant (PTDC/SAU-MI/66248/2006) from ‘Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia’ (FCT) and by ‘Programa Operacional Ciência e Inovação 2010’ (POCI2010) to AES and by a European Molecular Biology Organization Installation Grant to BSS. HNC received a scholarship from FCT co-financed by POCI 2010, and JCR received a post-doctoral fellowship from FCT

    Cutting Edge : adaptive versus innate receptor signals selectively control the pool sizes of murine IFN-γ- or IL-17-producing γβ T cells upon infection

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    ©2010 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc. All rights reserved.γβ T lymphocytes are commonly viewed as embracing properties of both adaptive and innate immunity. Contributing to this is their responsiveness to pathogen products, either with or without the involvement of the TCR and its coreceptors. This study clarifies this paradoxical behavior by showing that these two modes of responsiveness are the properties of two discrete sets of murine lymphoid γβ T cells. Thus, MyD88 deficiency severely impaired the response to malaria infection of CD27(-), IL-17A–producing γβ T cells, but not of IFN-γ–producing γβ cells. Instead, the latter compartment was severely contracted by ablating CD27, which synergizes with TCRγβ in the induction of antiapoptotic mediators and cell cycle-promoting genes in CD27(+), IFN-γ–secreting γβ T cells. Hence, innate versus adaptive receptors differentially control the peripheral pool sizes of discrete proinflammatory γβ T cell subsets during immune responses to infection.This work was supported by an installation grant from the European Molecular Biology Organization (to B.S.-S.), Grants PTDC/SAU-MII/104158/2008 (to B.S.-S.) and PTDC/SAU-MII/099314/2008 (to J.P.S.) from Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, and the Wellcome Trust (to A.C.H. and M.W.)
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