Abstract
To examine the role of CTLA-4 in controlling Ag-specific CD8+ T cell activation, TCR-transgenic/CTLA-4 wild-type or -deficient mice were generated in a recombination-activating gene 2-deficient background. Naive T cells from these mice responded comparably whether or not CTLA-4 was expressed. In contrast, primed T cells responded more vigorously if they lacked CTLA-4 expression. We took advantage of the difference between naive and primed T cell responses to approach the mechanism of CTLA-4 function. Single-cell analyses demonstrated that a greater fraction of CTLA-4-deficient cells responded to a fixed dose of Ag compared with CTLA-4-expressing cells, whereas the magnitude of response per cell was comparable. A shift in the dose-response curve to APCs was also observed such that fewer APCs were required to activate CTLA-4-deficient T cells to produce intracellular IFN-γ and to proliferate. These results suggest that CTLA-4 controls the threshold of productive TCR signaling. Biochemical analysis comparing stimulated naive and primed TCR-transgenic cells revealed no obvious differences in expression of total CTLA-4, tyrosine-phosphorylated CTLA-4, and associated Src homology domain 2-containing protein tyrosine phosphatase. Thus, the biochemical mechanism explaining the differential inhibitory effect of CTLA-4 on naive and primed CD8+ T cells remains unclear.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Gajewski, T. F., Fallarino, F., Fields, P. E., Rivas, F., & Alegre, M.-L. (2001). Absence of CTLA-4 Lowers the Activation Threshold of Primed CD8+ TCR-Transgenic T Cells: Lack of Correlation with Src Homology Domain 2-Containing Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase. The Journal of Immunology, 166(6), 3900–3907. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.166.6.3900
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