| Literature DB >> 30021156 |
Mayura V Wagle1, Julia M Marchingo2, Jason Howitt3, Seong-Seng Tan4, Christopher C Goodnow5, Ian A Parish6.
Abstract
Escape from peripheral tolerance checkpoints that control cytotoxic CD8+ T cells is important for cancer immunotherapy and autoimmunity, but pathways enforcing these checkpoints are mostly uncharted. We reveal that the HECT-type ubiquitin ligase activator, NDFIP1, enforces a cell-intrinsic CD8+ T cell checkpoint that desensitizes TCR signaling during in vivo exposure to high antigen levels. Ndfip1-deficient OT-I CD8+ T cells responding to high exogenous tolerogenic antigen doses that normally induce anergy aberrantly expanded and differentiated into effector cells that could precipitate autoimmune diabetes in RIP-OVAhi mice. In contrast, NDFIP1 was dispensable for peripheral deletion to low-dose exogenous or pancreatic islet-derived antigen and had little impact upon effector responses to Listeria or acute LCMV infection. These data provide evidence that NDFIP1 mediates a CD8+ T cell tolerance checkpoint, with a different mechanism to CD4+ T cells, and indicates that CD8+ T cell deletion and anergy are molecularly separable checkpoints.Entities:
Keywords: Ndfip1; T cell; anergy; autoimmunity; checkpoint; peripheral tolerance; ubiquitin ligases
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30021156 PMCID: PMC6112980 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423