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Out-of-Sequence Signal 3 Paralyzes Primary CD4+ T-Cell-Dependent Immunity
- Sckisel, Gail D;
- Bouchlaka, Myriam N;
- Monjazeb, Arta M;
- Crittenden, Marka;
- Curti, Brendan D;
- Wilkins, Danice EC;
- Alderson, Kory A;
- Sungur, Can M;
- Ames, Erik;
- Mirsoian, Annie;
- Reddy, Abhinav;
- Alexander, Warren;
- Soulika, Athena;
- Blazar, Bruce R;
- Longo, Dan L;
- Wiltrout, Robert H;
- Murphy, William J
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.immuni.2015.06.023Abstract
Primary T cell activation involves the integration of three distinct signals delivered in sequence: (1) antigen recognition, (2) costimulation, and (3) cytokine-mediated differentiation and expansion. Strong immunostimulatory events such as immunotherapy or infection induce profound cytokine release causing "bystander" T cell activation, thereby increasing the potential for autoreactivity and need for control. We show that during strong stimulation, a profound suppression of primary CD4(+) T-cell-mediated immune responses ensued and was observed across preclinical models and patients undergoing high-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) therapy. This suppression targeted naive CD4(+) but not CD8(+) T cells and was mediated through transient suppressor of cytokine signaling-3 (SOCS3) inhibition of the STAT5b transcription factor signaling pathway. These events resulted in complete paralysis of primary CD4(+) T cell activation, affecting memory generation and induction of autoimmunity as well as impaired viral clearance. These data highlight the critical regulation of naive CD4(+) T cells during inflammatory conditions.
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