PTPN22 Alters the Development of Regulatory T Cells in the Thymus

  • Maine C
  • Hamilton-Williams E
  • Cheung J
  • et al.
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Abstract

PTPN22 encodes a tyrosine phosphatase that inhibits Src-family kinases responsible for Ag receptor signaling in lymphocytes and is strongly linked with susceptibility to a number of autoimmune diseases. As strength of TCR signal is critical to the thymic selection of regulatory T cells (Tregs), we examined the effect of murine PTPN22 deficiency on Treg development and function. In the thymus, numbers of pre-Tregs and Tregs increased inversely with the level of PTPN22. This increase in Tregs persisted in the periphery and could play a key part in the reduced severity observed in the PTPN22-deficient mice of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a mouse model of multiple sclerosis. This could explain the lack of association of certain autoimmune conditions with PTPN22 risk alleles.

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Maine, C. J., Hamilton-Williams, E. E., Cheung, J., Stanford, S. M., Bottini, N., Wicker, L. S., & Sherman, L. A. (2012). PTPN22 Alters the Development of Regulatory T Cells in the Thymus. The Journal of Immunology, 188(11), 5267–5275. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1200150

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