|
|
||||||||



* Institute for Immunology, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany; and
Departments of Medicine and Microbiology, University of California, San Francisco, CA, 94143
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
S1P is the natural ligand for S1P1, that is present in plasma and serum at high nanomolar to low micromolar concentrations (12, 13, 14). S1P, at concentrations higher than that in blood normally, and some synthetic agonists for S1P1 such as phosphorylated FTY720 also induce lymphopenia and block exitation of mature thymocytes (15, 16, 17). Direct functional effects of S1P on lymphocytes also are highly concentration-dependent (8). Elicitation of chemotaxis is optimal at low nanomolar S1P concentrations in vitro (10), whereas inhibitory effects on chemokine-induced lymphocyte migration or lymphocyte proliferation in vitro require high nanomolar to low micromolar concentrations (8, 18). Therefore an increase in the systemic S1P concentration or the level of expression of S1P1 may alter the range of functional responses of lymphocytes, as well as their lymphoid tissue distribution. S1P1 is a widely expressed GPCR, which also has critical roles in endothelial cell and cardiomyocyte survival and functions (1, 19). Stimulation of S1P1 on endothelial cells increases cell-to-cell contact and the resultant endovascular barrier by inducing adherens junction assembly (20), which may contribute to inhibition of thymocyte and lymphocyte movements. Thus S1P-S1P1 signals also may regulate lymphocyte traffic by effects on nonlymphoid cells.
We now show that transgenic (Tg) constitutive expression of S1P1 on lymphocytes modulates the migration, lymphoid tissue distribution, and proliferation of activated lymphocytes, and consequently suppresses cutaneous delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions and significantly alters Ab responses to TNP Ag challenge with skewed isotype specificity.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
A blunt-end fragment of the coding region of human S1P1-R cDNA was cloned into the SmaI site of an improved version of human CD2 minigene-based Bluescript vector, kindly provided by Dr. S. Hedrick (University of California, San Diego, CA (21)). After sequencing the construct (ELIM Biopharmaceuticals), the minigene was cut out of the vector with SalI and NotI (New England Biolabs), purified and injected into C57BL/6 x DBA/2 F2 hybrid embryos (Transgenic Core Facility of the Cancer Center, University of California, San Francisco, CA). Tail DNA of Tg pups was tested by real-time PCR and slot blot techniques. Tg mice and control human S1P1-R negative littermates were studied between 8 and 14 wk of age. All experiments were conducted according to protocols approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of California, San Francisco.
Real-time PCR
Mouse and human S1P1 cDNA and human Tg S1P1-R DNA were quantified by real-time PCR as described (11). Each run was standardized with the respective detection of 1 ng of genomic DNA from C57BL/6 wild-type (wt) mice or from the human T cell line Jurkat (American Type Culture Collection, TIB-152), and each sample was normalized to the expression of either hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase cDNA or GAPDH genomic DNA. Conditions were as follows: 1x Taq Polymerase buffer, 0.5 U of Taq polymerase (Invitrogen Life Technologies), 10 mM MgCl2, 100 µM dNTPs (Invitrogen Life Technologies), 100 nM primer, 25 nM probe, 40 nM Rox (Integrated DNA Technologies, Coralville, IA), 20 ng of template-cDNA or 1 ng of template-genomic DNA. The PCR program was as follows: 1 cycle of 4:30 min at 94°C, 40 cycles of 30 s at 94 °C, and 1 min at 60°C. Total RNA was isolated with TRIzol (Invitrogen Life Technologies), treated with DNase I (Invitrogen Life Technologies), and transcribed with the SuperScript First-Strand Synthesis System for RT-PCR (Invitrogen Life Technologies).
Slot blot analysis
The coding region of the human S1P1-R cDNA was cloned with HindIII and XbaI into the pcDNA3.1+ expression vector (Invitrogen Life Technologies) and cut with XbaI. This construct was used to generate a digoxigenin-labeled probe with the DIG RNA Labeling Kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals) using the kit T7 polymerase. Two nanograms of genomic DNA were blotted on Hybond N+ nylon membranes (Amersham Biosciences), and blots were hybridized and detected using the DIG Wash and Block Buffer Set and the DIG Nucleic Acid Detection Kit (Roche Molecular Biochemicals).
Western blot analysis
Membrane proteins extracted from 5 x 106 T cells were separated in a 10% polyacrylamide gel, blotted onto a polyvinylidene fluoride membrane, and developed with polyclonal rabbit anti-human S1P1 (ExAlpha) and monoclonal rat anti-mouse CD44 (BD Biosciences) Abs, as described (22).
Isolation and activation of T cells
Mouse CD4 and CD8 T cells were isolated from splenocytes using metallic beads bearing the respective mAbs (Miltenyi Biotec). Suspensions of 5 x 106 purified T cells in 2 ml of RPMI 164010% FCS (HyClone) with penicillin/streptomycin (Invitrogen Life Technologies) were activated by incubation for 20 h on 2.5 µg each of anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAbs (BD Biosciences) adherent to 6-well plates.
Transwell chemotaxis assay
Chemotaxis of mouse splenocytes was quantified as described (23), using 12-well Transwell chambers with 5-µm pore size filters (Costar) coated with 100 µg/ml collagen type IV (Sigma-Aldrich) overnight at 4°C. Filter chambers were washed twice with 500 µl of PBS, air-dried, and filled with 100 µl of suspensions of 1 x 107 cells/ml in RPMI 1640 including 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.4 (University of California, San Francisco, Cell Culture Facility, San Francisco, CA), 0.1% fatty acid-free BSA (Calbiochem), and 1x penicillin/streptomycin (Invitrogen Life Technologies). Bottom compartments were filled with 600 µl of the same medium containing different concentrations of S1P (Sigma-Aldrich). Cells that migrated to the bottom chamber in 4 h at 37°C in 5% CO2 in air were counted in a Neubauer hematocytometer (Fisher Scientific).
Flow cytometry analysis
Cell staining and analysis were performed according to standard protocols (24). FITC-, R-PE-, allophycocyanin-, or PerCP-conjugated anti-mouse CD3-, CD4-, CD8-, CD19-, and CD69 Ab (BD Biosciences)-stained cells were analyzed using FACSCalibur (BD Immunocytometry Systems).
Enumeration of leukocyte subpopulations in blood
Leukocyte counts were determined in blood samples collected from the retro-orbital venous sinus using a Hemavet 850 Mascot model blood cell counter (CDC Technologies) according to the manufacturers protocol (25).
Quantification of plasma Ig concentrations
Two dilutions of plasma from the retro-orbital blood samples were analyzed with ELISA kits for total IgG (Cygnus Technologies), IgG1, IgG2a, IgA, and IgM (Bethyl Laboratories), and IgE (Crystal Chemical) (25).
TNP-derivatized keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) immune challenge and quantification of TNP-specific Ig concentrations
TNP-KLH immunization was done as described (25). Groups of five S1P1-R Tg mice and wt control mice were immunized i.p. with 10 µg of TNP-KLH (Biosearch Technologies) adsorbed to 0.2 mg of Al(OH)3 (primary). Each mouse was boosted 14 days later i.p. with 10 µg of TNP-KLH (secondary). After 14 and 21 days, plasma samples were isolated from retro-orbital venous blood. TNP-specific IgE, IgG1, IgG2b, and total IgG levels were quantified by ELISA in 96-well plates coated with 0.5 µg of TNP-conjugated chicken
globulin (Biosearch Technologies), that were then washed, and incubated with two optimized dilutions of plasma samples. Bound immunoglobulins were detected with HRP-conjugated anti-mouse total IgG (Cygnus Technologies), IgG1, IgG2b, and IgE (Bethyl Laboratories) Abs (25). Standard curves were generated with monoclonal mouse IgG1, IgG2b, IgE, and polyclonal mouse IgG (total) anti-TNP Abs (BD Biosciences).
Assessment of DTH reactions
Groups of five S1P1-R Tg mice and wt control mice were immunized in two different ways as described (25, 26). In the first method, primary immunization was painting bare abdominal skin on day 0 with 20 µl of 0.5% 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) in acetone/olive oil (4/1, v/v; Sigma-Aldrich), and the DTH challenge 6 days later was by painting 20 µl of 0.5% DNFB on the right ear, using the solvent alone on the left ear as a control. In the second method, primary immunization was achieved by s.c. injection in each flank of 1 mg of 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylacetylhydroxysuccinimide ester (NP OSu; Biosearch Technologies) in 40 µl of DMSO, followed by 100 µl of 0.05 M sodium borate-buffered 0.1 M NaCl (pH 8.6) in dorsal midline skin. The DTH challenge 6 days later was by injecting 40 µg of NP OSu in 25 µl of PBS in the right rear footpad with 25 µl of PBS alone in the left rear footpad as a control. Thickness of both ears and rear footpads were quantified 24 and 48 h after the secondary immune challenge using a calibrated digital micrometer with 0.025 mm resolution (Fisher Scientific).
Quantification of splenic T cell proliferation
Replicate suspensions of 2 x 105 CD4 and CD8 T cells purified by immunomagnetic beads from spleens of S1P1-R Tg mice and non-Tg littermates each were incubated in 0.2 ml of RPMI 1640 medium with 10% FCS, penicillin, and streptomycin in 96-well plates. Some wells had been precoated with 0.2 µg each of anti-CD3 mAb and anti-CD28 mAb to stimulate T cells through the TCR, as described (18), and other wells received 2 x 105 irradiated mixed mononuclear leukocytes from spleens of BALB/c mice to evoke a MLR. After 48 h, 1 µCi of [3H]thymidine (New England Nuclear) was added to each well, incubations were continued for another 16 h, and T cells were harvested and washed three times with PBS and twice with 70% ethanol before measuring radioactivity in a Beckman liquid scintillation counter.
Assessment of organ distribution of S1P1-R Tg and control wt 51Cr-labeled CD4 T cells
CD4 T cells (2 x 107) purified by immunomagnetic beads from spleens of S1P1-R Tg mice and non-Tg C57BL/6 littermates were suspended in 2 ml each of Ca2+- and Mg2+-free PBS for incubation at 37°C for 30 min with 50 µCi of 51Cr (Na251CrO4, PerkinElmer/New England Nuclear). Labeled CD4 T cells then were washed three times in Ca2+- and Mg2+-free PBS, an aliquot of each was counted, and portions of 106 were injected i.v. into each mouse within groups of 6 wt C57BL/6 mice. Organs were harvested from each of three mice per group at 2 and 24 h after injections of labeled CD4 T cells, and radioactivity in each organ sample then was counted.
Adoptive transfer of CFSE- and seminaphthorhodafluor-1-acetoxymethylester (Snarf)-labeled T cells
T cells activated with adherent anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 mAbs were washed once and resuspended at 1 x 107 cells/ml of Ca2+/Mg2+-free PBS (PBS-d) for labeling with 2.5 µM CFSE (Molecular Probes) or 5 µM Snarf (Molecular Probes) for 10 min at room temperature (CFSE) or at 37°C (Snarf). After adding 1 vol of FCS, cells were washed twice in RPMI 1640 with 10% FCS and twice in PBS-d, and were resuspended at 2 x 107 cells/ml of PBS-d. Suspensions of 600 µl of cells were injected into the tail vein of each wt mouse. After 20 h, mice were sacrificed and lymphocytes from peripheral lymph nodes (LNs), spleen, and blood were isolated and analyzed by flow cytometry.
Statistics
Statistical significance was calculated using Prism version 3 (Graphpad Software). Evaluations of significance are based on Students t tests.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
cDNA encoding the human S1P1-R was cloned into an improved version of the human CD2 minigene-based vector (Fig. 1a), which promotes T cell-specific and copy number-dependent expression of gene products (21). Microinjection of the construct in C57BL/6 x DBA/2 F2 hybrid embryos resulted in four positive founders, that were identified by real-time PCR and slot blots of genomic tail DNA. Mating of the highest expressors of each generation resulted in Tg S1P1 mice bearing
35 copies of the CD2-S1P1 minigene by and after the F3 generation, as determined by real-time PCR.
|
Real-time PCR revealed high levels of expression of endogenous mouse S1P1 in naive T and B cells of both wt and human S1P1-R Tg mice (Fig. 1b). Ex vivo activation of CD4 and CD8 T cells with immobilized anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 Abs down-regulated endogenous mouse S1P1 transcript by >95% in T cells of wt and human S1P1-R Tg mice (Fig. 1b). The human S1P1-R transgene detected in S1P1-R Tg mice, but not wt mice (Fig. 1c), was highly expressed in CD4 and CD8 T cells with 13- to 17-fold less expression in naive CD45R B cells. Expression of the human S1P1-R transcript was consistently maintained in T cells activated ex vivo with immobilized anti-CD3 plus anti-CD28 Abs (Fig. 1c), in contrast to the striking suppression of endogenous mouse S1P1 transcript by T cell activation (Fig. 1b). Expression of human S1P1-R Tg protein also was demonstrated with a polyclonal Ab against both human and mouse S1P1-R proteins (Fig. 1d). TCR-dependent activation of CD4 and CD8 T cells from wt mice down-regulated expression of the endogenous mouse S1P1-R protein nearly totally (Fig. 1d). In contrast, little down-regulation of Tg S1P1-R protein was seen in membrane preparations of similarly activated CD4 and CD8 T cells from S1P1-R Tg mice, and these levels were higher than those of wt T cells (Fig. 1d). S1P1-R protein expression in activated Tg T cells was similar to that observed in naive wt T cells (Fig. 1d).
Ex vivo T cell chemotaxis to S1P
CD4 and CD8 T cells migrate optimally to 10 nM S1P ex vivo (7). Higher expression of total S1P1-R by lymphocytes of S1P1-R Tg mice increased chemotaxis of naive CD4 T cells to 10 nM S1P when compared with that of wt mice (Fig. 2a). However, the most significant difference between wt mice and S1P1-R Tg mice was observed after ex vivo activation with immobilized anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAbs. Whereas activated CD4 and CD8 T cells from wt mice almost completely lost their migratory response to a range of concentrations of S1P, activated CD4 and CD8 T cells from S1P1-R Tg mice still migrated chemotactically to S1P with optimal responses at 10 nM S1P (Fig. 2b).
|
The S1P-S1P1-R axis regulates thymocyte exitation and lymphocyte egress from SLOs in mice (9, 10). Therefore, the distribution of lymphocytes and lymphocyte subsets was analyzed in blood and lymphoid organs to determine whether higher expression of the human S1P1-R transgene modulates lymphocyte trafficking in the naive state. No statistically significant changes were observed in absolute or relative blood lymphocyte counts of S1P1-R Tg mice compared with wt mice (Fig. 3, a and b). Blood from both sets of mice had identical average counts per microliter and percentages of total leukocytes, lymphocytes, and neutrophils. Relative counts of CD3 total T cells and CD19 B cells (Fig. 3c) and of CD4 and CD8 T cells (Fig. 3d) isolated from LNs, spleen, and blood of both S1P1-R Tg mice and wt mice were determined by flow cytometry analysis. A significantly higher number of CD3 T cells was found for S1P1-R Tg mice than for wt mice in blood, but not in LNs and spleen (Fig. 3c). wtCD3 T cells and CD19 B cells each constituted
25% of total blood leukocytes, whereas S1P1 Tg CD3 T cells were nearly 40% of total blood leukocytes (Fig. 3c). There were no differences between Tg and wt mice in CD19 B cells. Similar CD4 and CD8 T cell ratios were observed in LNs, spleen, and blood of S1P1-R Tg mice and wt mice (Fig. 3d). The overall numbers of lymphocytes in S1P1-Tg and wt mice also were similar. Age-matched S1P1-Tg and wt mice had similar sizes and weights of spleens and LNs.
|
In their naive state, Tg and wt mice had similar plasma levels of IgG1, IgG2a, total IgG, IgA, and IgM, but significantly elevated plasma concentration of IgE (Fig. 4a). After challenging immunized mice with TNP-KLH, anti-TNP-specific IgG1 Ab levels increased to similar levels in plasma of both S1P1-R Tg mouse and wt mice (Fig. 4b). Anti-TNP-specific IgG2b Ab levels in wt mice rose
30-fold at 21 days after primary immunization with TNP-KLH (7 days after the boosting dose), whereas those in S1P1-R Tg mice increased only 5-fold at the same time (Fig. 4b). The lower TNP-specific IgG2b levels in TNP-KLH challenged S1P1-R Tg mouse plasma was also reflected partially in lower levels of anti-TNP-specific total IgG in S1P1-R Tg mice compared with wt mice (Fig. 4b). The anti-TNP-specific IgE Ab level was significantly greater in S1P1-R Tg mice at 14 and 21 days after primary TNP-KLH immunization than in wt mice (Fig. 4b).
|
T cell-mediated DTH responses were assessed by ear reactions to contact with DNFB or by footpad responses to intradermal NP OSu, with measurements of swelling relative to control sites at 24 and 48 h after the respective challenges. Both methods revealed a significantly reduced DTH response in S1P1-R Tg mice compared with that in wt mice (Fig. 5a).
|
Modulation of T cell trafficking in vivo
The effects of persistent expression of S1P1 by activated as well as naive Tg T cells on their in vivo trafficking was examined in two ways. First, CD4 splenic T cells from wt mice and S1P1-R Tg mice were isolated and labeled with 51Cr before i.v. introduction of suspensions of 106 labeled T cells into wt mice, recovery from diverse organ systems at 2 and 24 h, and quantification of radioactivity (Fig. 6). Highly significant and selective differences in lymphoid organ distribution of CD4 T cells from wt and S1P1-R Tg mice were demonstrated by 60% to 70% lesser homing of S1P1-R Tg T cells than wt T cells to LNs and Peyers patches of small intestines at 2 and 24 h, and spleen at 2 h, but not thymus, lungs, kidneys, liver, or brain (Fig. 6). The levels of T cells in blood were not different for the two groups. Second, CD4 and CD8 splenic T cells from wt mice and S1P1-R Tg mice were isolated and activated for 24 h ex vivo on immobilized anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAbs. Activated CD4 and CD8 T cells from both lines of mice then were labeled separately for each source with CFSE and Snarf in both combinations, mixed at a constant ratio of 2:1 (CD4:CD8), and injected i.v. into wt mice. After 20 h, mice were sacrificed, and lymphocytes were isolated from peripheral LNs, spleen, and blood for fluorescence analysis. The most significant difference in levels of adoptively transfered activated T cells was seen in blood, where S1P1-R Tg T cells were >2-fold more abundant than wt T cells (Fig. 7). A similar ratio was seen in spleen with 1.4-fold more activated S1P1-R Tg T cells than activated wt T cells. In contrast, LNs had 1.5-fold fewer activated S1P1-R Tg T cells than activated wt T cells (Fig. 7). No significant shift in the CD4:CD8 T cell-ratio was observed, when comparing S1P1-R Tg to wt T cells in any of the samples. Ex vivo activation with immobilized anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAbs revealed no differences between T cells from S1P1-R Tg and wt mice in Transwell assays of chemotaxis to the T cell homing chemokine CCL21, indicating that the chemokine receptor CCR7 is not altered in S1P1-R Tg mice in this experimental setting.
|
|
When CD4 or CD8 T cells were incubated on TCR-specific mAbs or mixed splenic mononuclear leukocytes from BALB/c mice, a prominent proliferative response was observed in each case (Fig. 8). All responses of T cells from S1P1-R Tg mice were significantly lower than those of T cells from wt mice.
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Tg S1P1 expression by naive T cells had no or little effect on most aspects of basal immunity, including total and relative lymphocyte counts in blood (Fig. 3, a and b), CD4 and CD8 T cell counts and ratios in LNs, spleen, and blood (Fig. 3d), and all Ig levels except IgE in plasma (Fig. 4a). S1P is present in blood at concentrations high enough to nearly completely occupy S1P1 GPCRs, but the level of saturation of S1P1 is predicted to be lower in tissues (12, 13, 14). The S1P-S1P1 GPCR axis has two distinct effects on T cell migration, including direct chemotactic stimulation by low nanomolar S1P and suppression of chemotaxis to chemokines by high nanomolar to low nanomolar S1P typical of blood (7, 8). Therefore S1P may elicit thymocyte exitation and lymphocyte egress from SLOs by acting as a chemoattractant and also retain lymphocytes in blood by suppressing chemotaxis to chemokines generated in SLOs and nonlymphoid tissues (11). The ex vivo chemotactic responses of naive CD4 T cells from S1P1 Tg mice to 10 nM S1P were greater than those of the CD4 T cells from wt mice (Fig. 2a). Enhancement of both migration effects of S1P by increased levels of S1P1 in S1P1-R Tg mice may explain the higher levels of CD3 T cells in blood of S1P1-Tg mice (Fig. 3c).
Significant differences were observed between the mean plasma IgE level in wt and S1P1-R Tg mice, and between isotype-selective Ab responses of wt mice and S1P1-R Tg mice (Fig. 4a). Immunization with TNP-KLH resulted in a 6- to 8-fold lower production of IgG2b and a 2.5-fold higher generation of IgE Ab levels in S1P1-R Tg mice than wt mice, without significant changes in IgG1 levels compared with wt mice (Fig. 4b). IgG1 and IgE are known as Th2 isotypes which are important for immune-mediated inflammation and hypersensitivity, whereas IgG2a, IgG2b, and IgG3 are considered Th1 isotypes that mediate resistance to microbial infections (27). The immune response to TNP-KLH is therefore skewed toward a Th2 response with increased levels of IgE and reduced concentrations of IgG2b compared with wt mice (Fig. 4b). Studies in progress will define the cytokine and transcriptional mechanisms underlying the Th2-shift elicited by the S1P-S1P1 GPCR axis.
The dramatically diminished DTH response of S1P1-R Tg mice compared with wt mice also may reflect enhancement of S1P1-mediated direct chemotaxis of T cells into lymph and blood, and greater inhibition of chemotaxis of T cells to chemokines at sites of DTH (Fig. 5a). Diminished DTH also may reflect the suppressed proliferation of S1P1-R Tg T cells relative to that of wt T cells (Fig. 8). DTH reactions are known to be mediated principally by Th1 cells (28). Examination of lymphocytes from cervical LNs of DNFB-challenged S1P1 GPCR-Tg mice showed a lesser state of activation than those from wt mice, as determined by their level of expression of CD69, but this was not CD4 T cell-specific (Fig. 5b). Activation of CD4 and CD8 T cells from challenged cervical LNs in S1P1-GPCR Tg mice was significantly reduced, whereas B cells were not suppressed or only slightly affected (Fig. 5b). This result correlates with the more prominent expression of the S1P1 GPCR transgene in T cells compared with B cells (Fig. 1c), but other indices of T cell activation less directly susceptible to regulation by S1P than CD69 must be examined as well.
S1P1 GPCR expression by T cells thus is critical both for T cell migration to S1P and S1P inhibition of T cell chemotaxis to chemokines, both of which are increased by a higher level of S1P1 on activated S1P1-R Tg T cells (7, 10). Expression of the human S1P1-R Tg maintains the migratory responsiveness of both CD4 and CD8 T cells to S1P after activation, whereas activation-induced down-regulation of the endogenous mouse S1P1-R transcript renders corresponding T cells from wt mice unresponsive to S1P (Fig. 2b). The persistent responsiveness to S1P of activated S1P1-R Tg T cells may contribute to both decreased entry into LNs, as a result of maintenance of S1P inhibition of chemotaxis to chemokines (Fig. 6), and increased entry into the circulation by enhanced chemotactic responsiveness to S1P. Activated T cells from S1P1-R Tg mice that were labeled with either CFSE or Snarf and adoptively transfered into wt mice were twice as frequent in blood as their corresponding wt T cells at 20 h (Fig. 7). The same tendency was seen in spleen, although to a lesser extent. In contrast, lower numbers of T cells were recovered from LNs of S1P1-R Tg mice than wt mice, supporting the hypothesis that S1P1-R expression on lymphocytes is critical for actively maintaining lymphocyte circulation in blood (11).
The surprise finding of strikingly diminished proliferation of T cells from S1P1-R Tg mice compared with that of T cells from wt mice also is as yet unexplained (Fig. 8). S1P suppresses T cell proliferation through both S1P1 and S1P4 receptors (18). When the level of expression of S1P1 is elevated, any endogenous S1P is capable of transmitting proliferation inhibitory effects on T cells. Whether separate subsets of CD4 T cells generate and respond to S1P or this is a property of all CD4 T cells of S1P1-R Tg mice remains to be examined.
The S1P-S1P1 GPCR system is emerging as a potent lipid mediator complex capable of effectively regulating T cell responses to chemokines and thereby trafficking through LNs and along lymphatic pathways, as well as intrinsic T cell immune activities such as proliferation. This system is far more prominent than any of the eicosanoid-type lipid mediators (29) as a regulatory factor for T cells and through its effects on T cells has a broad influence on cellular and humoral immunity.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 The research described was supported in part by Grant HL31809 from the National Institutes of Health (to E.J.G.). M.H.G. was supported in part by the Emmy Noether-Programm from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. ![]()
2 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Edward J. Goetzl, University of California, Room UB8B, UC Box 0711, 533 Parnassus at 4th, San Francisco, CA 94143-0711. E-mail address: egoetzl{at}itsa.ucsf.edu ![]()
3 Abbreviations used in this paper: S1P, sphingosine 1-phosphate; GPCR, G protein-coupled receptor; Tg, transgenic; wt, wild type; S1P1 or S1P1-R, type 1 S1P receptor; KLH, keyhole limpet hemocyanin; Snarf, seminaphthorhodafluor-1-acetoxymethylester; DNFB, 2,4-dinitrofluorobenzene; NP OSu, 4-hydroxy-3-nitrophenylacetylhydroxysuccinimide ester; SLO, secondary lymphoid organ; DTH, delayed-type hypersensitivity; LN, lymph node. ![]()
Received for publication July 20, 2004. Accepted for publication November 23, 2004.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S. Srinivasan, D. T. Bolick, D. Lukashev, C. Lappas, M. Sitkovsky, K. R. Lynch, and C. C. Hedrick Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Reduces CD4+ T-Cell Activation in Type 1 Diabetes Through Regulation of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor Short Isoform I.1 and CD69 Diabetes, February 1, 2008; 57(2): 484 - 493. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M.-C. Huang, S. R. Watson, J.-J. Liao, and E. J. Goetzl Th17 Augmentation in OTII TCR Plus T Cell-Selective Type 1 Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Receptor Double Transgenic Mice J. Immunol., June 1, 2007; 178(11): 6806 - 6813. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J.-J. Liao, M.-C. Huang, and E. J. Goetzl Cutting Edge: Alternative Signaling of Th17 Cell Development by Sphingosine 1-Phosphate J. Immunol., May 1, 2007; 178(9): 5425 - 5428. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
W. Wang, M.-C. Huang, and E. J. Goetzl Type 1 Sphingosine 1-Phosphate G Protein-Coupled Receptor (S1P1) Mediation of Enhanced IL-4 Generation by CD4 T Cells from S1P1 Transgenic Mice J. Immunol., April 15, 2007; 178(8): 4885 - 4890. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J.-R. Nofer, M. Bot, M. Brodde, P. J. Taylor, P. Salm, V. Brinkmann, T. van Berkel, G. Assmann, and E. A.L. Biessen FTY720, a Synthetic Sphingosine 1 Phosphate Analogue, Inhibits Development of Atherosclerosis in Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor Deficient Mice Circulation, January 30, 2007; 115(4): 501 - 508. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J.-J. Liao, M.-C. Huang, M. Graler, Y. Huang, H. Qiu, and E. J. Goetzl Distinctive T Cell-suppressive Signals from Nuclearized Type 1 Sphingosine 1-Phosphate G Protein-coupled Receptors J. Biol. Chem., January 19, 2007; 282(3): 1964 - 1972. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |