Ceramide-induced TCR up-regulation

C Menné, JPH Lauritsen, J Dietrich… - The Journal of …, 2000 - journals.aai.org
C Menné, JPH Lauritsen, J Dietrich, J Kastrup, AMK Wegener, N Ødum, C Geisler
The Journal of Immunology, 2000journals.aai.org
The TCR is a constitutively recycling receptor meaning that a constant fraction of TCR from
the plasma membrane is transported inside the cell at the same time as a constant fraction of
TCR from the intracellular pool is transported to the plasma membrane. TCR recycling is
affected by protein kinase C activity. Thus, an increase in protein kinase C activity affects
TCR recycling kinetics leading to a new TCR equilibrium with a reduced level of TCR
expressed at the T cell surface. Down-regulation of TCR expression compromises T cell …
Abstract
The TCR is a constitutively recycling receptor meaning that a constant fraction of TCR from the plasma membrane is transported inside the cell at the same time as a constant fraction of TCR from the intracellular pool is transported to the plasma membrane. TCR recycling is affected by protein kinase C activity. Thus, an increase in protein kinase C activity affects TCR recycling kinetics leading to a new TCR equilibrium with a reduced level of TCR expressed at the T cell surface. Down-regulation of TCR expression compromises T cell activation. Conversely, TCR up-regulation is expected to increase T cell responsiveness. The purpose of this study was to identify and characterize potential pathways for TCR up-regulation. We found that ceramide affected TCR recycling dynamics and induced TCR up-regulation in a concentration-and time-dependent manner. Experiments applying phosphatase inhibitors indicated that ceramide-induced TCR up-regulation was most probably mediated by serine/threonine protein phosphatase 2A. Analyses of T cell variants demonstrated that TCR up-regulation was dependent on the presence of an intact CD3γ L-based motif and thus acted on TCR engaged in the recycling pathway. Finally, we showed that TCR up-regulation probably plays a physiological role by increasing T cell responsiveness. Thus, by affecting the TCR recycling kinetics, T cells have the potential both to up-and down-regulate TCR expression and thereby adjust T cell responsiveness.
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