Mkhikian H et al. (JAN 2011)
Nature communications 2 334
Genetics and the environment converge to dysregulate N-glycosylation in multiple sclerosis.
How environmental factors combine with genetic risk at the molecular level to promote complex trait diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS) is largely unknown. In mice,N-glycan branching by the Golgi enzymes Mgat1 and/or Mgat5 prevents T cell hyperactivity,cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA-4) endocytosis,spontaneous inflammatory demyelination and neurodegeneration,the latter pathologies characteristic of MS. Here we show that MS risk modulators converge to alter N-glycosylation and/or CTLA-4 surface retention conditional on metabolism and vitamin D(3),including genetic variants in interleukin-7 receptor-α (IL7RA*C),interleukin-2 receptor-α (IL2RA*T),MGAT1 (IV(A)V(T-T)) and CTLA-4 (Thr17Ala). Downregulation of Mgat1 by IL7RA*C and IL2RA*T is opposed by MGAT1 (IV(A)V(T-T)) and vitamin D(3),optimizing branching and mitigating MS risk when combined with enhanced CTLA-4 N-glycosylation by CTLA-4 Thr17. Our data suggest a molecular mechanism in MS whereby multiple environmental and genetic inputs lead to dysregulation of a final common pathway,namely N-glycosylation.
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产品号#:
15021
15061
产品名:
RosetteSep™人T细胞富集抗体混合物
RosetteSep™人T细胞富集抗体混合物
A. A. Titov et al. (jul 2019)
Journal of immunology (Baltimore,Md. : 1950) 203 2 338--348
Metformin Inhibits the Type 1 IFN Response in Human CD4+ T Cells.
In systemic lupus erythematosus,defective clearance of apoptotic debris and activation of innate cells result in a chronically activated type 1 IFN response,which can be measured in PBMCs of most patients. Metformin,a widely used prescription drug for Type 2 diabetes,has a therapeutic effect in several mouse models of lupus through mechanisms involving inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation and a decrease in CD4+ T cell activation. In this study,we report that in CD4+ T cells from human healthy controls and human systemic lupus erythematosus patients,metformin inhibits the transcription of IFN-stimulated genes (ISGs) after IFN-alpha treatment. Accordingly,metformin inhibited the phosphorylation of pSTAT1 (Y701) and its binding to IFN-stimulated response elements that control ISG expression. These effects were independent of AMPK activation or mTORC1 inhibition but were replicated using inhibitors of the electron transport chain respiratory complexes I,III,and IV. This indicates that mitochondrial respiration is required for ISG expression in CD4+ T cells and provides a novel mechanism by which metformin may exert a therapeutic effect in autoimmune diseases.
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Martinez-Gonzalez I et al. (JUL 2016)
Immunity 45 1 198--208
Allergen-Experienced Group 2 Innate Lymphoid Cells Acquire Memory-like Properties and Enhance Allergic Lung Inflammation.
Group 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2s) in the lung are stimulated by inhaled allergens. ILC2s do not directly recognize allergens but they are stimulated by cytokines including interleukin (IL)-33 released by damaged epithelium. In response to allergens,lung ILC2s produce T helper 2 cell type cytokines inducing T cell-independent allergic lung inflammation. Here we examined the fate of lung ILC2s upon allergen challenges. ILC2s proliferated and secreted cytokines upon initial stimulation with allergen or IL-33,and this phase was followed by a contraction phase as cytokine production ceased. Some ILC2s persisted long after the resolution of the inflammation as allergen-experienced ILC2s and responded to unrelated allergens more potently than naive ILC2s,mediating severe allergic inflammation. The allergen-experienced ILC2s exhibited a gene expression profile similar to that of memory T cells. The memory-like properties of allergen-experienced ILC2s may explain why asthma patients are often sensitized to multiple allergens.
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