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Roquin differentiates the specialized functions of duplicated T cell costimulatory receptor genes CD28 and ICOS

Abstract

During evolutionary adaptation in the immune system, host defense is traded off against autoreactivity. Signals through the costimulatory receptor CD28 enable T cells to respond specifically to pathogens, whereas those through the related costimulatory receptor, ICOS, which arose by gene duplication, are critical for affinity maturation and memory antibody responses. ICOS ligand, unlike the pathogen-inducible CD28 ligands, is widely and constitutively expressed in the immune system. Here, we show that crosstalk between these two pathways provides a mechanism for obviating the normal T cell dependence on CD28. Several CD28-mediated responses-generation of follicular helper T cells, germinal center formation, T helper 1 cell-dependent extrafollicular antibody responses to Salmonella and bacterial clearance, and regulatory T cell homeostasis-became independent of CD28 and dependent on ICOS when the E3 ubiquitin ligase Roquin was mutated. Mechanisms to functionally compartmentalize ICOS and CD28 signals are thus critical for two-signal control of normal immune reactions.

Type Journal
ISBN 1074-7613 (Print)
Authors Linterman, M.A.; Rigby, R.J.; Wong, R.; Silva, D.; Withers, D.; Anderson, G.; Verma, N.K.; Brink, R.; Hutloff, A.; Goodnow, C.C.; Vinuesa, C.G.
Publisher Name IMMUNITY
Published Date 2009-02-20
Published Volume 30
Published Issue 2
Published Pages 228-41
Status Published in-print
URL link to publisher's version http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=19217324
OpenAccess link to author's accepted manuscript version https://publications.gimr.garvan.org.au/open-access/10197