Altered T-dependent antigen responses and development of autoimmune symptoms in mice lacking E2A in T lymphocytes

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Abstract

E2A has been shown to be an important transcription factor downstream of the T-cell receptor (TCR) signal during T-cell development. The TCR signal is known to elicit different cellular responses at different stages of T-cell development. Whether E2A is still required for normal TCR signalling in mature T cells is unknown. Here we examined T-cell function after disruption of the E2A gene exclusively in the T-cell lineage. The conditional E2A-deficient mice show enhanced humoral immunity to a T-dependent antigen. We further show that E2A is involved in regulating TCR-induced T-cell proliferation events. However, E2A seems to play opposite roles in naïve and effector T cells. In the absence of E2A, TCR-induced proliferation is increased in naïve T cells and decreased in effector T cells. At older ages, these mice frequently develop antinuclear antibodies and proteinuria. Our studies suggest that E2A regulates T-cell function and the loss of E2A may promote age-dependent autoimmune diseases.

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Pan, L., Bradney, C., Zheng, B., & Zhuang, Y. (2004). Altered T-dependent antigen responses and development of autoimmune symptoms in mice lacking E2A in T lymphocytes. Immunology, 111(2), 147–154. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0019-2805.2003.01802.x

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