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Siglec-G represses DAMP-mediated effects on T cells
Tomomi Toubai, Corinne Rossi, Katherine Oravecz-Wilson, Cynthia Zajac, Chen Liu, Thomas Braun, Hideaki Fujiwara, Julia Wu, Yaping Sun, Stuart Brabbs, Hiroya Tamaki, John Magenau, Pang Zheng, Yang Liu, Pavan Reddy
Tomomi Toubai, Corinne Rossi, Katherine Oravecz-Wilson, Cynthia Zajac, Chen Liu, Thomas Braun, Hideaki Fujiwara, Julia Wu, Yaping Sun, Stuart Brabbs, Hiroya Tamaki, John Magenau, Pang Zheng, Yang Liu, Pavan Reddy
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Research Article Immunology Transplantation

Siglec-G represses DAMP-mediated effects on T cells

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Abstract

The role of negative regulators or suppressors of the damage-associated molecular pattern–mediated (DAMP-mediated) stimulation of innate immune responses is being increasingly appreciated. However, the presence and function of suppressors of DAMP-mediated effects on T cells, and whether they can be targeted to mitigate T cell–dependent immunopathology remain unknown. Sialic acid–binding immunoglobulin-like lectin G (Siglec-G) is a negative regulator of DAMP-mediated responses in innate immune cells, but its T cell–autonomous role is unknown. Utilizing loss-of-function–based (genetic knockout) and gain-of-function–based (agonist) approaches, we demonstrate that in the presence of certain DAMPs, Siglec-G suppressed in vitro and in vivo T cell responses. We also demonstrate that its T cell–autonomous role is critical for modulating the severity of the T cell–mediated immunopathology, graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Enhancing the Siglec-G signaling in donor T cells with its agonist, a CD24Fc fusion protein, ameliorated GVHD while preserving sufficient graft-versus-tumor (GVT) effects in vivo. Collectively, these data demonstrate that Siglec-G is a potentially novel negative regulator of T cell responses, which can be targeted to mitigate GVHD.

Authors

Tomomi Toubai, Corinne Rossi, Katherine Oravecz-Wilson, Cynthia Zajac, Chen Liu, Thomas Braun, Hideaki Fujiwara, Julia Wu, Yaping Sun, Stuart Brabbs, Hiroya Tamaki, John Magenau, Pang Zheng, Yang Liu, Pavan Reddy

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Figure 4

Siglec-G does not alter Treg-mediated suppression.

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Siglec-G does not alter Treg-mediated suppression.
(A) Treg suppression ...
(A) Treg suppression assay. Bone marrow–derived DCs from BALB/c mice were used as stimulators, cocultured with effector T cells (CD4+CD25–) and Tregs (CD4+CD25+) from either B6 WT or B6 Siglec-G–/– animals at different ratios in a mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) and analyzed for T cell proliferation following 3H-thymidine incorporation during the last 16 hours of incubation (P = not significant [NS]). (B) Survival of WT BALB/c animals in Treg-depleted allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (allo-BMT). Recipient BALB/c animals received 8.5 Gy on day –1 and were transplanted with splenic CD25-depleted T cells along with T cell–depleted bone marrow from either syngeneic BALB/c or allogeneic MHC-mismatched B6 donors. n = 4–16 per group, pooled from 3 experiments. Kaplan-Meier method. **P < 0.01, when B6 WT versus B6 Siglec-G–/– animals were compared.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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