Decreased T-cell receptor signaling through CARD11 differentially compromises forkhead box protein 3-positive regulatory versus T H 2 effector cells to cause allergy
Loading...
Date
Authors
Altin, John
Tian, Lei
Liston, Adrian
Bertram, Edward
Goodnow, Christopher
Cook, Matthew
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Mosby Inc
Abstract
Background: Allergy, the most common disease of immune dysregulation, has a substantial genetic component that is poorly understood. Although complete disruption of T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling causes profound immunodeficiency, little is known about the consequences of inherited genetic variants that cause partial quantitative decreases in particular TCR-signaling pathways, despite their potential to dysregulate immune responses and cause immunopathology. Objective: We sought to elucidate how an inherited decrease in TCR signaling through CARD11, a critical scaffold protein that signals to nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) transcription factors, results in spontaneous selective accumulation of large numbers of TH2 cells. Methods: "Unmodulated" mice carry a Card11 single nucleotide variant that decreases but does not abolish TCR/CD28 signaling to induce targets of NF-κB. The consequences of this mutation on T-cell subset formation in vivo were examined, and its effects within effector versus regulatory T-cell subsets were dissected by the adoptive transfer of wild-type cells and by the examination of forkhead box protein 3 (Foxp3)-deficient unmodulated mice. Results: Unlike the pathology-free boundary points of complete Card11 sufficiency or deficiency, unmodulated mice have a specific allergic condition characterized by increased IgE levels and dermatitis. The single nucleotide variant partially decreases both the frequency of Foxp3+ regulatory T cells and the efficiency of effector T-cell formation in vivo. These intermediate effects combine to cause a gradual and selective expansion of TH2 cells. Conclusions: Inherited reduction in the efficiency of TCR-NF-κB signaling has graded effects on T-cell activation and Foxp3+ regulatory T-cell suppression that result in selective TH2 dysregulation and allergic disease.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31