Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1207
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dc.contributor.authorArimbasseri, Gopalakrishnan Aneeshkumar-
dc.contributor.authorBal, Vineeta-
dc.contributor.authorGeorge, Anna-
dc.contributor.authorRath, Satyajit-
dc.contributor.authorChawla, Amanpreet Singh-
dc.contributor.authorKhalsa, Jasneet Kaur-
dc.contributor.authorDhar, Atika-
dc.contributor.authorGupta, Suman-
dc.contributor.authorUmar, Danish-
dc.date.accessioned2021-03-23T11:09:32Z-
dc.date.available2021-03-23T11:09:32Z-
dc.date.issued2020-07-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1207-
dc.description.abstractActivated T-cells make both interleukin-2 (IL2) and its high-affinity receptor component CD25. Regulatory CD4 T-cells (Treg cells) do not make IL2, and the IL2-CD25 circuit is considered a paracrine circuit crucial in their generation and maintenance. Yet, all T-cells are capable of making IL2 at some stage during differentiation, making a cell-intrinsic autocrine circuit additionally possible. When we re-visited experiments with mixed bone marrow chimeras using a wide range of ratios of wild-type (WT) and IL2-/- genotype progenitors, we found that, as expected, thymic Treg cells were almost equivalent between WT and IL2-/- genotypes at ratios with WT prominence. However, at WT-limiting ratios, the IL2-/- genotype showed lower thymic Treg frequencies, indicating a role for cell-intrinsic autocrine IL2 in thymic Treg generation under IL2-limiting conditions. Further, peripheral IL2-/- naive CD4 T-cells showed poor conversion to inducible Tregs (pTregs) both in vivo and in vitro, again indicating a significant role for cell-intrinsic autocrine IL2 in their generation. Peripherally, the IL2-/- genotype was less prominent at all WT:IL2-/- ratios among both thymic Tregs (tTregs) and pTregs, adoptively transferred IL2-/- Tregs showed poorer survival than WT Tregs did, and RNA-seq analysis of WT and IL2-/- Tregs showed interesting differences in the T-cell receptor and transforming growth factor-beta-bone morphogenetic protein-JNK pathways between them, suggesting a non-titrating role for cell-intrinsic autocrine IL2 in Treg programming. These data indicate that cell-intrinsic autocrine IL2 plays significant roles in Treg generation and maintenance.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherJohn Wiley & Sons Ltden_US
dc.subjectFOXP3; IL2; Tregs; autocrine; paracrineen_US
dc.titleA role for cell-autocrine interleukin-2 in regulatory T-cell homeostasisen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
dc.journalImmunologyen_US
dc.volumeno160en_US
dc.issueno3en_US
dc.pages295-309en_US
Appears in Collections:Molecular Genetic, Publications

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