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T cell long-term hyporesponsiveness follows antigen receptor engagement and results from defective signal transduction
Authors:Patrice M. Dubois  Fabienne Andris  Jacques Urbain  Oberdan Leo  Marcelle Kaufman  Robert A. Shapiro  Lisa K. Gilliland  Jeffrey A. Ledbetter
Abstract:T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated stimulation of T hybridomas leads to cell activation and lymphokine production that is followed by a long-term hyporesponsiveness. To investigate the biochemical events involved in the induction and maintenance of this antigen receptor hyporesponsiveness or anergy, we have expressed a G protein/PLCβ1-coupled muscarinic subtype 1 acetylcholine receptor in a murine T cell hybrid. Transfected cells were capable of responding to both muscarinic agonists and TCR ligands by inducing interleukin-2 secretion that was sensitive to cyclosporin A and dexamethasone. Both receptors induced tyrosine kinase (TK) activity, but muscarinic stimulation did not affect tyrosine phosphorylation of PLCγ1, nor did the TK inhibitor, herbimycin, block muscarinic receptor-mediated calcium mobilization. These data indicate that in T cells, the muscarinic receptor mediates T cell effector functions by regulating a TK-independent proximal pathway which later converges with the TCR pathway. Using these cells, we have explored the long-term consequences of T cell stimulation via antigen or muscarinic receptors. Our results show that hyporesponsiveness specifically follows TCR engagement and appears to result from a defect in the early signal transduction initiated by TCR cross-linking. A study of TCR-mediated signaling supports this model by showing that tyrosine phosphorylation and calcium mobilization are deficient in hyporesponsive T cells.
Keywords:T lymphocytes  Anergy  Signaling transduction
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