J. Exp. Med.

CD43 is a large heavily glycosylated protein highly expressed on T cells and actively excluded from the immunological synapse through interactions with ezrin-radixin-moesin proteins. Due to its size and charge, it has been proposed that the CD43 ectodomain acts as a physical barrier to T cell-APC interactions. We have addressed this hypothesis by studying the effect of reconstituting CD43 mutants into the hyperproliferative CD43(-/-) T cells. Reintroduction of full-length CD43 reversed the CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation. Interestingly, despite the lack of exclusion from the interaction site, a mutant containing the CD43 ectodomain on a glycosylphosphatidylinositol linkage was ineffective. Additionally, T cell-APC conjugate formation was not affected by this ectodomain-only construct. In contrast, CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation was reversed by an intracellular-only CD43 fused to the small ectodomain of hCD16. Mutation of this intracellular-only CD43 such that it could not move from the T cell-APC contact site had no further affect on proliferation than the moveable CD43 but did dramatically reduce interleukin-2 production. Thus, the exclusion of the CD43 intracellular region from the immunological synapse is required for CD43 regulation of interleukin-2 production, but the presence of the cytoplasmic tail, independent of its location, is sufficient to reverse CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/15117976

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rdf:type
rdfs:comment
CD43 is a large heavily glycosylated protein highly expressed on T cells and actively excluded from the immunological synapse through interactions with ezrin-radixin-moesin proteins. Due to its size and charge, it has been proposed that the CD43 ectodomain acts as a physical barrier to T cell-APC interactions. We have addressed this hypothesis by studying the effect of reconstituting CD43 mutants into the hyperproliferative CD43(-/-) T cells. Reintroduction of full-length CD43 reversed the CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation. Interestingly, despite the lack of exclusion from the interaction site, a mutant containing the CD43 ectodomain on a glycosylphosphatidylinositol linkage was ineffective. Additionally, T cell-APC conjugate formation was not affected by this ectodomain-only construct. In contrast, CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation was reversed by an intracellular-only CD43 fused to the small ectodomain of hCD16. Mutation of this intracellular-only CD43 such that it could not move from the T cell-APC contact site had no further affect on proliferation than the moveable CD43 but did dramatically reduce interleukin-2 production. Thus, the exclusion of the CD43 intracellular region from the immunological synapse is required for CD43 regulation of interleukin-2 production, but the presence of the cytoplasmic tail, independent of its location, is sufficient to reverse CD43(-/-) T cell hyperproliferation.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
J. Exp. Med.
uniprot:author
Allenspach E.J., Burkhardt J.K., Mody P.D., Park C., Sperling A.I., Takahashi S.M., Tong J.
uniprot:date
2004
uniprot:pages
1277-1283
uniprot:title
CD43 regulation of T cell activation is not through steric inhibition of T cell-APC interactions but through an intracellular mechanism.
uniprot:volume
199
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1084/jem.20021602