2 research outputs found

    Antigen-Presenting Cell Function during Plasmodium yoelii Infection

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    Antigen-presenting cells (APC) play a key role in orchestrating immune responses. T-cell proliferative responses are inhibited during the erythrocyte stages of malaria infection, and a number of studies have suggested that APC are responsible for this phenomenon. In the present studies we examine individual components of the T-cell-activating function of APC: expression of costimulatory and major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II proteins, the ability to process and present antigen to T cells, and the ability to support cytokine production. We find that during the acute phases of Plasmodium yoelii erythrocyte stage infection, APC upregulate the expression of class II MHC and CD80, maintain expression of CD86, process and present antigen, and support gamma interferon production. However the CD11b(+) subpopulation produces a soluble factor or factors that specifically inhibit interleukin-2 (IL-2) production by responding CD4 T cells. This factor is distinct from prostaglandin E(2), NO, or transforming growth factor β. The data suggest that IL-2 suppression observed during malaria infection is not due to functional defects of APC but is triggered by production of a factor(s) that actively suppresses production of IL-2 by T cells

    Boundary-independent polar nonsense-mediated decay

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    Nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) is an RNA surveillance mechanism that degrades mRNAs containing premature termination (nonsense) codons. The second signal for this pathway in mammalian cells is an intron that must be at least ∼55 nucleotides downstream of the nonsense codon. Although the functional significance of this ‘–55 boundary rule’ is not known, it is widely thought to reflect the important role of an exon junction protein complex deposited just upstream of exon–exon junctions after RNA splicing. Here we report that a T-cell receptor (TCR)-β gene did not conform to this rule. Rather than a definitive boundary position, nonsense codons had a polar effect, such that nonsense codons distant from the terminal downstream intron triggered robust NMD and proximal nonsense codons caused modest NMD. We identified a region of the TCR-β gene that conferred this boundary-independent polar expression pattern on a heterologous gene. Collectively, our results suggest that TCR-β transcripts contain one or more sequence elements that elicit an unusual NMD response triggered by a novel second signal that ultimately causes boundary-independent polar regulation. TCR genes may have evolved this unique NMD response because they frequently acquire nonsense codons during normal development
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