The Proteasome Immunosubunit Multicatalytic Endopeptidase Complex-Like 1 Is a T-Cell-Intrinsic Factor Influencing Homeostatic Expansion
- 1 March 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 76 (3), 1207-1213
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.01134-07
Abstract
Homeostatic regulatory mechanisms maintain the constant ratios between different lymphocyte subsets in the secondary lymphoid organs. How this dynamic equilibrium is achieved, in particular following the clonal expansion and subsequent contraction of different cells after infection, remains poorly understood. Expression of the proteasome immunosubunits has been shown to influence not only major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) antigen processing and thereby T-cell responses, but also the CD4/CD8 T-cell ratios in lymphoid organs. We examined the relationships between these different immunosubunit-mediated effects in mice of various proteasome subunit compositions during infection with Listeria monocytogenes . Mice that lacked the immunosubunit multicatalytic endopeptidase complex-like 1 (MECL-1) maintained enhanced CD4/CD8 T-cell ratios during infection, while MHC-I surface levels resembled those in wild-type (wt) mice. LMP7 gene-deficient mice, on the other hand, showed reduced MHC-I expression, while their splenic CD4/CD8 ratios were similar to those in wt mice. Remarkably, analysis of bone marrow-chimeric immunosubunit gene-deficient mice, reconstituted with a mixture of wt and LMP7- plus MECL-1-deficient bone marrow, revealed that the LMP7- plus MECL-1-deficient T-cell population maintained a higher CD4/CD8 T-cell ratio than the wt T-cell population before, during, and after infection and T-cell memory formation. Since in these mice the immunosubunit-positive and immunosubunit-negative T-cell populations were selected in the same thymus and expanded in the same lymphoid environments, our findings indicate that MECL-1 influences the homeostatic equilibrium between T-cell subsets, not through indirect extracellular signals, such as MHC-I expression or the cytokine milieu, but through direct effects on T-cell-intrinsic processes.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of CD8 + T Cell Development by Thymus-Specific ProteasomesScience, 2007
- Virus-induced type I IFN stimulates generation of immunoproteasomes at the site of infectionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2006
- T Cells Lacking Immunoproteasome Subunits MECL-1 and LMP7 Hyperproliferate in Response to Polyclonal MitogensThe Journal of Immunology, 2006
- Proteasomes shape the repertoire of T cells participating in antigen-specific immune responsesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- β2 Subunit Propeptides Influence Cooperative Proteasome AssemblyJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2003
- Bipartite regulation of different components of the MHC class I antigen-processing machinery during dendritic cell maturationInternational Immunology, 2001
- Overexpression of the Proteasome Subunits LMP2, LMP7, and MECL-1, But Not PA28α/β, Enhances the Presentation of an Immunodominant Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Virus T Cell EpitopeThe Journal of Immunology, 2000
- DEGRADATION OF CELL PROTEINS AND THE GENERATION OF MHC CLASS I-PRESENTED PEPTIDESAnnual Review of Immunology, 1999
- Intermediates in the formation of mouse 20S proteasomes: implications for the assembly of precursor beta subunitsThe EMBO Journal, 1997
- MHC Class I Expression in Mice Lacking the Proteasome Subunit LMP-7Science, 1994