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Hem1 controls T cell activation, memory, and the regulated release of immunosuppressive and proinflammatory cytokines
Alexandra Christodoulou, Nutthakarn Suwankitwat, Jacob T. Tietsort, Ryan Culbert, Julia Y. Tsai, Fatima Tarbal, Chengsong Zhu, Brian M. Iritani
Alexandra Christodoulou, Nutthakarn Suwankitwat, Jacob T. Tietsort, Ryan Culbert, Julia Y. Tsai, Fatima Tarbal, Chengsong Zhu, Brian M. Iritani
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Research Article Immunology Inflammation

Hem1 controls T cell activation, memory, and the regulated release of immunosuppressive and proinflammatory cytokines

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Abstract

Hematopoietic protein-1 (Hem1) is a component of the WASp family verprolin-homologous protein (WAVE) actin regulatory complex, which is activated downstream of multiple immune receptors. Mutations in the NCKAP1L gene encoding HEM1 have recently been found to result in severe primary immunodeficiency disease (PID), characterized by recurrent respiratory infections, hyperinflammation, autoimmunity, and high mortality. However, how loss of Hem1 results in PID is unclear. To define the importance of Hem1 specifically in T cells, we generated constitutive and T cell–specific Hem1-null mice. Hem1-deficient T cells exhibited an increased shift from naive to memory T cells and increased ratio of immunosuppressive regulatory to effector T cells. Loss of Hem1 resulted in hallmarks of T cell exhaustion, including T cell lymphopenia, decreased activation and proliferation, increased expression of PD-1 and Tim3, and increased IL-10 production. In vitro TCR stimulation of CD4+ T cells resulted in increased production of Th1 (IFN-γ), Th2 (IL-5, IL-13), Th17 (IL-17, IL-22), and Treg (IL-10) cytokines. This correlated with reduced F-actin, increased expression of CD107a, and increased granzyme release indicative of increased granule membrane fusion and exocytosis. These results suggest that Hem1 is critical for maintaining T cell activation, homeostasis, and regulated cytokine production following antigen encounter.

Authors

Alexandra Christodoulou, Nutthakarn Suwankitwat, Jacob T. Tietsort, Ryan Culbert, Julia Y. Tsai, Fatima Tarbal, Chengsong Zhu, Brian M. Iritani

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Figure 8

T cell–specific deletion of Hem1 results in increased mTORC signaling in CD4+ T cells. (A)

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T cell–specific deletion of Hem1 results in increased mTORC signaling in...
Immunoblot of indicated proteins from lysates of purified CD4+ T cells from Hem1fl/flCD4Cre mice and Hem1fl/fl littermate controls stimulated for 0, 10, and 30 minutes with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 antibodies. Normalized intensity was determined using ImageJ software and bar graphs represent mean ± SEM. n = 2/group, 18- to 19-week-old mice. Data representative of 3 independent experiments. (B) Total splenocytes harvested Hem1fl/flCD4Cre mice and Hem1fl/fl littermate controls and stimulated for 0, 10, and 30 minutes with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 antibodies. Flow cytometric analysis of intracellular signaling proteins p-AKTS473 and p-S6RS240/244 levels in CD4+ T cells. (C) Flow cytometric analysis of intracellular signaling protein p-AKTS473 in naive (CD44lo) and memory (CD44hi) CD4+ T cells. Cells first gated on FSC/SSC lymphocytes, FSC-H/FSC-A single cells, and CD4+ T cells. See representative flow cytometric histograms in Supplemental Figure 5A. n = 4/group, 32- to 33-week-old mice. Data representative of 3 independent experiments, each dot represents an individual mouse. Data were analyzed via unpaired 2-tailed Student’s t test. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01. NS, not significant; min, minutes; CTL, control; cKO, conditional knockout.

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