Kinetic assessment of general gene expression changes during human naive CD4+ T cell activation

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Abstract

The consequence of naive CD4+ T cell activation is the differentiation and generation of effector cells. How the engagement of T cell receptors and co-stimulatory receptors leads to profound differential changes is not fully understood. To assess the transcription changes during T cell activation, we developed human T cell specific cDNA microarray gene filters and examined the gene expression profiles in human naive CD4+ T cells for 10 continuous time points during the first 24 h after anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 (anti-CD3/CD28) stimulation. We report here a global and kinetic analysis of gene expression changes during naive CD4+ T cell activation and identify 196 genes having expression levels that significantly changed after activation. Based on the temporal change, there are 15 genes that changed between 0-1 h (early), 25 genes between 2-8 h (middle) and 156 genes between 16-24 h (late) after stimulation. Further analyses of the functions of those genes indicate their roles in maintenance of resting status, activation, adhesion/migration, cell cycle progression and cytokine production. However, a significant majority of these genes are novel to T cells and their functions in T cell activation require further study. Together, these results present a kinetic view of the gene expression changes of naive CD4+ T cells in response to T cell receptor-mediated activation for the first time, and provide a basis in understanding how the complex network of gene expression regulation is programmed during CD4+ T cell activation. © 2004 The Japanese Society for Immunology.

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APA

Hess, K., Yang, Y., Golech, S., Sharov, A., Becker, K. G., & Weng, N. P. (2004). Kinetic assessment of general gene expression changes during human naive CD4+ T cell activation. International Immunology, 16(12), 1711–1721. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/dxh172

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