The monoclonal antibody C398.4A was produced by immunizing Armenian hamsters with the mouse T cell clone D10.G4.1. It recognizes a molecule selectively expressed by activated mouse T cells and was named H4. H4 is expressed on the T cell surface about 24 h after activation and peaks at day 7. By contrast, it is not expressed by resting or activated B cells, macrophages, or fibroblasts. It is also expressed by CD4 or CD8 single-positive mature thymocytes. Immunoprecipitation showed that H4 is a disulfide-linked dimer, precipitating as a broad band at about 50-65 kDa under nonreducing conditions and at 25 and 29 kDa under reducing conditions. Deglycosylation of the reduced H4 by N-glycanase gave rise to a single band of about 21 kDa, suggesting that the two chains may be differentially glycosylated forms of the same protein. The H4 expression pattern and biochemical features, together with cross-blocking, co-capping, co-modulation, and immunoprecipitation preclearing experiments showed that H4 is different from other known co-stimulatory molecules such as CD69, CD2, Ly-6, CD25, OX-40, Mac-1 and LFA-1. By in vitro kinase assay, H4 was found to co-precipitate a tyrosine kinase activity that phosphorylated substrates of about 29 and 25 kDa. Co-modulation and co-capping experiments showed that H4 is physically associated with the CD3/T cell receptor. These data suggest that H4 may function as a T cell-specific co-stimulatory molecule and play a role in the T cell response when the activation stimulus is limited either because the antigen is only available in low concentration or has a low agonistic activity.
H4/ICOS is a costimulatory molecule related to CD28. Its effects on early TCR signals have been analyzed in mouse CD4 + Th2 cells, expressing H4/ICOS at higher levels than Th1 clones. Anti-H4/ICOS antibodies strongly enhanced CD3-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of ZAP-70,´, or Vav, as well as extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), Jun Nterminal kinase (JNK) and p38 MAP kinase activation in these cells. The association of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI-3K) to H4/ICOS was enhanced by H4/ICOS cross-linking, and PI-3K inhibitors inhibited ERK and JNK activation and IL-4/IL-10 secretion, but not p38 MAP kinase or ZAP-70 activation. H4/ICOS-mediated activation of JNK, but not ERK or p38, is partially dependent on the expression of CD4 by the cells, whereas H4/ICOS costimulation is partially independent on CD28 expression. Cytochalasin D, an inhibitor of actin polymerization, inhibited ZAP-70, MAP kinase activation, or IL-4/IL-10 secretion. Neither cyclosporin A nor inhibitors of PKC produced detectable inhibition of ZAP-70 phosphorylation or MAP kinase activation in these Th2 cells. Cyclosporin A strongly inhibited IL-4, but not IL-10 secretion. ERK or JNK inhibitors partially inhibited IL-4 and IL-10 secretion, while PKC or p38 inhibitors had no significant effects on IL-4 or IL-10 secretion. Taken together, our data show clear similarities of costimulation mechanisms between H4/ICOS and CD28 during the early steps of TCR activation.
It is known that certain type I membrane molecules (complement receptors type 1 and 2) belonging to the regulators of complement activation (RCA) family are involved in the regulation of B lymphocyte activation. In contrast, only GPI-anchored RCA molecules (CD55) have been described to be involved in T lymphocyte activation. In this study, we describe a novel function for the mouse RCA type I membrane protein Crry/p65 as a costimulatory molecule in CD4+ T cell activation. This is shown by increased anti-CD3-induced proliferation of CD4+ spleen T lymphocytes in the presence of the Crry/p65-specific mAb P3D2. Furthermore, Ab-induced coligation of Crry/p65 and CD3 favors IL-4 rather than IFN-γ secretion in these cells. Crry/p65 signaling was also observed regardless of additional Ca2+, protein kinase C, or CD28-mediated costimuli. Analysis of intracellular intermediaries shows that Crry/p65-CD3 coligation enhances certain TCR/CD3-mediated signals, producing increased early tyrosine phosphorylation of many substrates and enhanced activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase, extracellular signal-related kinase. These data fit well with the association of Crry/p65 with the tyrosine kinase Lck found in T cell lysates. The epitope recognized by the mAb P3D2 interferes with the protective role of Crry/p65 on C3 deposition. The relationship between protective function and costimulation by Crry/p65 is discussed. Our results support a multifunctional role for Crry/p65 in T cells and suggest new links between the natural and adaptive immune responses.
To better understand T lymphocyte costimulation by inducible costimulator (ICOS; H4; CD278), we analyzed proteins binding to ICOS peptides phosphorylated at the Y(191)MFM motif. Phosphorylated ICOS binds class IA phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) p85α, p50-55α and p85β regulatory subunits and p110α, p110δ and p110β catalytic subunits. Intriguingly, T cells expressed high levels of both p110α or p110δ catalytic subunits, yet ICOS peptides, cell surface ICOS or PI3-kinase class IA regulatory subunits preferentially coprecipitated p110α catalytic subunits. Silencing p110α or p110δ partially inhibited Akt/PKB activation induced by anti-CD3 plus anti-ICOS antibodies. However, silencing p110α enhanced and silencing p110δ inhibited Erk activation. Both p110α- and p110δ-specific inhibitors blocked cytokine secretion induced by TCR/CD3 activation with or without ICOS costimulus, but only p110α inhibitors blocked ICOS-induced cell elongation. Thus, p110α and p110δ are essential to optimal T cell activation, but their abundance and activity differentially tune up distinct ICOS signaling pathways.
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