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Engel I  Murre C 《The EMBO journal》2004,23(1):202-211
E2A proteins regulate multiple stages of thymocyte development and suppress T-cell lymphoma. The activity of E2A proteins throughout thymocyte development is modulated by signals emanating from the pre-TCR and TCR. Here we demonstrate that E2A is required for the complete arrest in both differentiation and proliferation observed in thymocytes with defects in proteins that mediate pre-TCR signaling, including LAT, Lck and Fyn. We show that E2A proteins are required to prevent the accumulation of TCRbeta negative cells beyond the pre-TCR checkpoint. E2A-deficient thymocytes also exhibit abnormal cell-cycle progression prior to pre-TCR expression. Furthermore, we demonstrate that E47 can act in concert with Bcl-2 to induce cell-cycle arrest in vitro. These observations indicate that E2A proteins function during early thymocyte development to block cell-cycle progression prior to the expression of TCRbeta. In addition, these data provide further insight into how deficiencies in E2A lead to T lymphoma.  相似文献   

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En route to maturing as T cell receptor (TCR) alphabeta-expressing cells, the development of thymocytes is contingent on expression of a pre-TCR complex comprising a TCRbeta chain paired with a surrogate TCRalpha chain, pre-Talpha (pTalpha). The pre-TCR has been proposed to promote cell survival, proliferation, differentiation, and lineage commitment. However, the precise molecular mechanisms governing this variety of effects remain elusive. Here, we present a cellular system designed to biochemically dissect signals elicited upon pre-TCR expression. Using the T cell line 4G4 stably transfected with one of the two known pTalpha isoforms or selective pTalpha deletion mutants and TCRbeta, we were able to observe that expression of a functional pre-TCR complex is sufficient to control the levels of surface Fas protein, the stimulation of mitogen-activated and stress-regulated kinases, and the activation status of the p53 antioncogene. We demonstrate that this regulation has a major impact on the expression of important regulators of apoptosis, such as Bcl-2 family members, and the cell cycle, such as p21(WAF). Furthermore, we show here that cells expressing a functional pre-TCR are more resistant to different types of DNA damage-induced apoptosis and that these effects are contingent on an intact cytoplasmic tail of pTalpha. We finally propose that the presence of a functional pre-TCR complex triggers many intracellular pathways capable of driving and ensuring thymocyte survival in the presence of DNA damage.  相似文献   

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Alteration of early haematopoietic development is thought to be responsible for the onset of immature leukemias and lymphomas. We have previously demonstrated that Tax(HTLV-1) interferes with ?-selection, an important checkpoint of early thymopoiesis, indicating that human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infection has the potential to perturb thymic human αβ T-cell development. To verify that inference and to clarify the impact of HTLV-1 infection on human T-cell development, we investigated the in vivo effects of HTLV-1 infection in a "Human Immune System" (HIS) Rag2?/?γ(c)?/? mouse model. These mice were infected with HTLV-1, at a time when the three main subpopulations of human thymocytes have been detected. In all but two inoculated mice, the HTLV-1 provirus was found integrated in thymocytes; the proviral load increased with the length of the infection period. In the HTLV-1-infected mice we observed alterations in human T-cell development, the extent of which correlated with the proviral load. Thus, in the thymus of HTLV-1-infected HIS Rag2?/?γc?/? mice, mature single-positive (SP) CD4? and CD8? cells were most numerous, at the expense of immature and double-positive (DP) thymocytes. These SP cells also accumulated in the spleen. Human lymphocytes from thymus and spleen were activated, as shown by the expression of CD25: this activation was correlated with the presence of tax mRNA and with increased expression of NF-kB dependent genes such as bfl-1, an anti-apoptotic gene, in thymocytes. Finally, hepato-splenomegaly, lymphadenopathy and lymphoma/thymoma, in which Tax was detected, were observed in HTLV-1-infected mice, several months after HTLV-1 infection. These results demonstrate the potential of the HIS Rag2?/?γ(c)?/? animal model to elucidate the initial steps of the leukemogenic process induced by HTLV-1.  相似文献   

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Y Tanaka  M Hayashi  S Takagi    O Yoshie 《Journal of virology》1996,70(12):8508-8517
Previously, we showed that surface expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) was strongly upregulated in T cells carrying proviral human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) and that the viral transactivator protein Tax1 was capable of inducing the ICAM-1 gene. To determine the responsive elements in the human ICAM-1 gene promoter, a reporter construct in which the 5'-flanking 4.4-kb region of the ICAM-1 gene was linked to the promoterless chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene was cotransfected with expression vectors for Tax1 and Tax2, both of which were separately confirmed to be potent transactivators of the HTLV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR). Tax1 strongly activated the ICAM-1 promoter in all the cell lines tested: three T-cell lines (Jurkat, MOLT-4, and CEM), one monocytoid cell line (U937), and HeLa. Unexpectedly, Tax2 activated the ICAM-1 promoter only in HeLa. By deletion and mutation analyses of the 1.3-kb 5'-flanking region, we found that Tax1 transactivated the ICAM-1 promoter mainly via a cyclic AMP-responsive element (CRE)-like site at -630 to -624 in the Jurkat T-cell line and via an NF-kappaB site at -185 to -177 and an SP-1 site at -59 to -54 in HeLa. On the other hand, Tax2 was totally inactive on the ICAM-1 promoter in Jurkat but transactivated the promoter via the NF-kappaB site at -185 to -177 in HeLa. Gel mobility shift assays demonstrated proteins specifically binding to the CRE-like site at -630 to -624 in Tax1-expressing T-cell lines. Stable expression of Tax1 but not Tax2 in Jurkat subclones enhanced the surface expression of ICAM-1. The differential ability of Tax1 and Tax2 in transactivation of the ICAM-1 gene may be related to the differential pathogenicity of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2.  相似文献   

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CD3gamma and CD3delta are the most closely related CD3 components, both of which participate in the TCRalphabeta-CD3 complex expressed on mature T cells. Interestingly, however, CD3delta does not appear to participate functionally in the pre-T-cell receptor (TCR) complex that is expressed on immature T cells: disruption of CD3delta gene expression has no effect on the developmental steps controlled by the pre-TCR. Here we report that in contrast with CD3delta, CD3gamma is an essential component of the pre-TCR. We generated mice selectively lacking expression of CD3gamma, in which expression of CD3delta, CD3epsilon, CD3zeta, pTalpha and TCRbeta remained undisturbed. Thus, all components for composing a pre-TCR are available, with the exception of CD3gamma. Nevertheless, T-cell development is severely inhibited in CD3gamma-deficient mice. The number of cells in the thymus is reduced to <1% of that in normal mice, and the large majority of thymocytes lack CD4 and CD8 and are arrested at the CD44-CD25+ double negative (DN) stage of development. Peripheral lymphoid organs are also practically devoid of T cells, with absolute numbers of peripheral T cells reduced to only 2-5% of those in normal mice. Both TCRalphabeta and TCRgammadelta lineages fail to develop effectively in CD3gamma-deficient mice, although absence of CD3gamma has no effect on gene rearrangements of the TCRbeta, delta and gamma loci. Furthermore, absence of CD3gamma results in a severe reduction in the level of TCR and CD3epsilon expression at the cell surface of thymocytes and peripheral T cells. The defect in the DN to double positive transition in mice lacking CD3gamma can be overcome by anti-CD3epsilon-mediated cross-linking. CD3gamma is thus essential for pre-TCR function.  相似文献   

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The pre-TCR promotes thymocyte development in the alphabeta lineage. Productive rearrangement of the TCRbeta locus triggers the assembly of the pre-TCR, which includes the pTalpha chain and CD3 epsilongammadeltazeta subunits. This complex receptor signals the up-regulation of CD4 and CD8 expression, thymocyte proliferation/survival, and the cessation of TCRbeta rearrangements (allelic exclusion). In this study, we investigate the function of two conserved tyrosine residues located in the TCRbeta chain transmembrane region of the pre-TCR. We show that replacement of both tyrosines with alanine and expression of the mutant receptor in RAG-1(null) thymocytes prevents surface expression and abolishes pre-TCR function relative to wild-type receptor. Replacement of both tyrosines with phenylalanines (YF double mutant) generates a complex phenotype in which thymocyte survival and proliferation are severely disrupted, differentiation is moderately disrupted, and allelic exclusion is unaffected. We further show that the YF double mutant receptor is expressed on the cell surface and associates with pTalpha and CD3epsilon at the same level as does wild-type TCRbeta, while association of the YF double mutant with CD3zeta is slightly reduced relative to wild type. These data demonstrate that pre-TCR signaling pathways leading to proliferation and survival, differentiation, and allelic exclusion are differently sensitive to subtle mutation-induced alterations in pre-TCR structure.  相似文献   

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