| Literature DB >> 28285833 |
Haiyan Tan1, Kai Yang2, Yuxin Li1, Timothy I Shaw3, Yanyan Wang2, Daniel Bastardo Blanco4, Xusheng Wang5, Ji-Hoon Cho5, Hong Wang6, Sherri Rankin2, Cliff Guy2, Junmin Peng7, Hongbo Chi8.
Abstract
The molecular circuits by which antigens activate quiescent T cells remain poorly understood. We combined temporal profiling of the whole proteome and phosphoproteome via multiplexed isobaric labeling proteomics technology, computational pipelines for integrating multi-omics datasets, and functional perturbation to systemically reconstruct regulatory networks underlying T cell activation. T cell receptors activated the T cell proteome and phosphoproteome with discrete kinetics, marked by early dynamics of phosphorylation and delayed ribosome biogenesis and mitochondrial activation. Systems biology analyses identified multiple functional modules, active kinases, transcription factors and connectivity between them, and mitochondrial pathways including mitoribosomes and complex IV. Genetic perturbation revealed physiological roles for mitochondrial enzyme COX10-mediated oxidative phosphorylation in T cell quiescence exit. Our multi-layer proteomics profiling, integrative network analysis, and functional studies define landscapes of the T cell proteome and phosphoproteome and reveal signaling and bioenergetics pathways that mediate lymphocyte exit from quiescence.Entities:
Keywords: T cell; glycolysis; kinase; mTORC1; mitochondria; phosphoproteomics; proteomics; quiescence exit; systems biology; systems immunology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28285833 PMCID: PMC5466820 DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2017.02.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunity ISSN: 1074-7613 Impact factor: 31.745