155 resultados para signaling pathway
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The identification of novel transcription factors associated with antifungal response may allow the discovery of fungus-specific targets for new therapeutic strategies. A collection of 241 Candida albicans transcriptional regulator mutants was screened for altered susceptibility to fluconazole, caspofungin, amphotericin B, and 5-fluorocytosine. Thirteen of these mutants not yet identified in terms of their role in antifungal response were further investigated, and the function of one of them, a mutant of orf19.6102 (RCA1), was characterized by transcriptome analysis. Strand-specific RNA sequencing and phenotypic tests assigned Rca1 as the regulator of hyphal formation through the cyclic AMP/protein kinase A (cAMP/PKA) signaling pathway and the transcription factor Efg1, but also probably through its interaction with a transcriptional repressor, most likely Tup1. The mechanisms responsible for the high level of resistance to caspofungin and fluconazole observed resulting from RCA1 deletion were investigated. From our observations, we propose that caspofungin resistance was the consequence of the deregulation of cell wall gene expression and that fluconazole resistance was linked to the modulation of the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway activity. In conclusion, our large-scale screening of a C. albicans transcription factor mutant collection allowed the identification of new effectors of the response to antifungals. The functional characterization of Rca1 assigned this transcription factor and its downstream targets as promising candidates for the development of new therapeutic strategies, as Rca1 influences host sensing, hyphal development, and antifungal response.
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Obesity and insulin resistance represent a problem of utmost clinical significance worldwide. Insulin-resistant states are characterized by the inability of insulin to induce proper signal transduction leading to defective glucose uptake in skeletal muscle tissue and impaired insulin-induced vasodilation. In various pathophysiological models, melatonin interacts with crucial molecules of the insulin signaling pathway, but its effects on glucose homeostasis are not known. In a diet-induced mouse model of insulin resistance and normal chow-fed control mice, we sought to assess the effects of an 8-wk oral treatment with melatonin on insulin and glucose tolerance and to understand underlying mechanisms. In high-fat diet-fed mice, but not in normal chow-fed control mice, melatonin significantly improved insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance, as evidenced by a higher rate of glucose infusion to maintain euglycemia during hyperinsulinemic clamp studies and an attenuated hyperglycemic response to an ip glucose challenge. Regarding underlying mechanisms, we found that melatonin restored insulin-induced vasodilation to skeletal muscle, a major site of glucose utilization. This was due, at least in part, to the improvement of insulin signal transduction in the vasculature, as evidenced by increased insulin-induced phosphorylation of Akt and endoethelial nitric oxide synthase in aortas harvested from melatonin-treated high-fat diet-fed mice. In contrast, melatonin had no effect on the ability of insulin to promote glucose uptake in skeletal muscle tissue in vitro. These data demonstrate for the first time that in a diet-induced rodent model of insulin resistance, melatonin improves glucose homeostasis by restoring the vascular action of insulin.
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PPARs are nuclear hormone receptors which, like the retinoid, thyroid hormone, vitamin D, and steroid hormone receptors, are ligand-activated transcription factors mediating the hormonal control of gene expression. Two lines of evidence indicate that PPARs have an important function in fatty acid metabolism. First, PPARs are activated by hypolipidemic drugs and physiological concentrations of fatty acids, and second, PPARs control the peroxisomal beta-oxidation pathway of fatty acids through transcriptional induction of the gene encoding the acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO), which is the rate-limiting enzyme of the pathway. Furthermore, the PPAR signaling pathway appears to converge with the 9-cis retinoic acid receptor (RXR) signaling pathway in the regulation of the ACO gene because heterodimerization between PPAR and RXR is essential for in vitro binding to the PPRE and because the strongest stimulation of this gene is observed when both receptors are exposed simultaneously to their activators. Thus, it appears that PPARs are involved in the 9-cis retinoic acid signaling pathway and that they play a pivotal role in the hormonal control of lipid metabolism.
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Although NK cells in the mouse are thought to develop in the bone marrow, a small population of NK cells in the thymus has been shown to derive from a GATA3-dependent pathway. Characteristically, thymic NK cells express CD127 and few Ly49 molecules and lack CD11b. Because these NK cells develop in the thymus, the question of their relationship to the T cell lineage has been raised. Using several different mouse models, we find that unlike T cells, thymic NK cells are not the progeny of Rorc-expressing progenitors and do not express Rag2 or rearrange the TCRγ locus. We further demonstrate that thymic NK cells develop independently of the Notch signaling pathway, supporting the idea that thymic NK cells represent bona fide NK cells that can develop independently of all T cell precursors.
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Glioblastoma are rapidly proliferating brain tumors in which hypoxia is readily recognizable, as indicated by focal or extensive necrosis and vascular proliferation, two independent diagnostic criteria for glioblastoma. Gene expression profiling of glioblastoma revealed a gene expression signature associated with hypoxia-regulated genes. The correlated gene set emerging from unsupervised analysis comprised known hypoxia-inducible genes involved in angiogenesis and inflammation such as VEGF and BIRC3, respectively. The relationship between hypoxia-modulated angiogenic genes and inflammatory genes was associated with outcome in our cohort of glioblastoma patients treated within prospective clinical trials of combined chemoradiotherapy. The hypoxia regulation of several new genes comprised in this cluster including ZNF395, TNFAIP3, and TREM1 was experimentally confirmed in glioma cell lines and primary monocytes exposed to hypoxia in vitro. Interestingly, the cluster seems to characterize differential response of tumor cells, stromal cells and the macrophage/microglia compartment to hypoxic conditions. Most genes classically associated with the inflammatory compartment are part of the NF-kappaB signaling pathway including TNFAIP3 and BIRC3 that have been shown to be involved in resistance to chemotherapy.Our results associate hypoxia-driven tumor response with inflammation in glioblastoma, hence underlining the importance of tumor-host interaction involving the inflammatory compartment.
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Proper function of the wall of bladder requires gap junctional communication for coordinating the responses of smooth muscle (SMC) and urothelial cells exposed to urine pressure. In the rat bladder, Cx43 is expressed by SMC and urothelial cells, whereas Cx26 expression is restricted to the epithelium. We used a model of bladder outlet obstruction, in which a ligature is placed around the urethra to increase voiding pressure. Increased fluid pressure was associated with increased Cx43 and Cx26 mRNA expression and with the activation of a signaling cascade including the transcription factor c-Jun, which is a component of the AP-1 complex. The signaling pathway of the c-Jun NH2 terminal kinase (JNK) requires the presence of the scaffold protein Islet-Brain1/c-Jun amino-terminal kinase Interacting Protein-1 (IB1/JIP-1). Under stress conditions resulting from urine retention, we have found a reduced content of IB1/JIP-1 in urothelial cells, which in turn induced a drastic increase of JNK and AP-1 binding activities. The stress-induced activation of JNK was prevented by overexpressing IB1/JIP-1, using a viral gene transfer approach, a condition which also resulted in a decrease in Cx26 mRNA. The data show that: 1) mechanical stress of urothelial cells activates in vivo JNK, as a consequence of a regulated expression of IB1/JIP-1 and 2) that urothelial Cx26 may be directly regulated by the AP-1 complex.
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Bcl10, a caspase recruitment domain (CARD)-containing protein identified from a breakpoint in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) B lymphomas, is essential for antigen-receptor-mediated nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) activation in lymphocytes. We have identified a novel CARD-containing protein and interaction partner of Bcl10, named Carma1. Carma1 is predominantly expressed in lymphocytes and represents a new member of the membrane-associated guanylate kinase family. Carma1 binds Bcl10 via its CARD motif and induces translocation of Bcl10 from the cytoplasm into perinuclear structures. Moreover, expression of Carma1 induces phosphorylation of Bcl10 and activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB. We propose that Carma1 is a crucial component of a novel Bcl10-dependent signaling pathway in T-cells that leads to the activation of NF-kappaB.
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Secondary growth of the vasculature results in the thickening of plant structures and continuously produces xylem tissue, the major biological carbon sink. Little is known about the developmental control of this quantitative trait, which displays two distinct phases in Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyls. The later phase of accelerated xylem expansion resembles the secondary growth of trees and is triggered upon flowering by an unknown, shoot-derived signal. We found that flowering-dependent hypocotyl xylem expansion is a general feature of herbaceous plants with a rosette growth habit. Flowering induction is sufficient to trigger xylem expansion in Arabidopsis. By contrast, neither flower formation nor elongation of the main inflorescence is required. Xylem expansion also does not depend on any particular flowering time pathway or absolute age. Through analyses of natural genetic variation, we found that ERECTA acts locally to restrict xylem expansion downstream of the gibberellin (GA) pathway. Investigations of mutant and transgenic plants indicate that GA and its signaling pathway are both necessary and sufficient to directly trigger enhanced xylogenesis. Impaired GA signaling did not affect xylem expansion systemically, suggesting that it acts downstream of the mobile cue. By contrast, the GA effect was graft transmissible, suggesting that GA itself is the mobile shoot-derived signal.
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Persistent infection induces an adaptive immune response that is mediated by T and B lymphocytes. Upon triggering with an antigen, these cells become activated and turn into fast expanding cells able to efficiently defend the host. Lymphocyte activation is controlled by a complex composed of CARMA1, BCL10 and MALT1 which regulates the NF-KB signaling pathway upon antigen triggering. Abnormally high expression or activity of either one of these three proteins can favor the development of lymphomas, while genetic defects in the pathway are associated with immunodeficiency. MALT1 was identified as a paracaspase sharing homology with other cysteine proteases, namely caspases and metacaspases. In order to be active, caspases need to dimerize. Based on their sequence similarity with MALT1, we hypothesized that dimerization might also be a mechanism of activation employed by MALT1. To address this assumption, we performed a bioinformatics modelling based on the crystal structures of several caspases. Our model suggested that the MALT1 caspase-like domain can indeed form dimers. This finding was later confirmed by several published crystal structures of MALT1. In the dimer interface of our model, we noticed the presence of charged amino acids that could potentially form salt bridges and thereby hold both monomers together. Mutation of one of these residues, E549, into alanine completely blocked the catalytic activity of MALT1. Additionally, we provided evidence for a role of E549 in promoting the MALTl-dependent growth of cells derived from diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the aggressive B cell-like type (ABC). To our initial surprise, the E549A mutation showed only a partial defect in dimerization, indicating that additional residues are essential to form a stable dimer. The MALT1 crystal structures revealed a key function for E549 in stabilizing the catalytic site of the protease via its interaction with an arginine which is located next to the catalytic active cysteine. In an additional study, we discovered that MALT1 monoubiquitination is required for the catalytic activity of the protease. Interestingly, we found that the MALT1 dimer interface mutant E549A could not be monoubiquitinated. Based on these findings, we suggest that correct formation of the dimer interface is a prerequisite for monoubiquitination. In a second project, we discovered a novel target of the protease MALT1, the ribonuclease Regnase¬la It was described that the RNase activity of Regnase-1 negatively regulates immune responses. We could show that in ABC DLBCL cell lines, Regnase-1 is not only cleaved by MALT1 but also phosphorylated, at least in part, by the inhibitor of KB kinase (IKK). Both regulations appear to restrain the RNase function of Regnase-1 and thereby allow the production of pro-survival proteins. In conclusion, our studies further highlight and explain the importance of the catalytic activity of MALT1 for the activation of lymphocytes and provide additional knowledge for the development of specific drugs targeting the catalytic activity of MALT1 for immunomodulation and treatment of lymphomas. SUMMARY IN FRENCH PhD Thesis Katrin Cabalzar 2 SUMMARY IN FRENCH Une infection persistante induit une réponse immunitaire adaptative par l'intermédiaire des lymphocytes T et B. Quand elles reconnaissent l'antigène, ces cellules sont activées et se multiplient très rapidement pour défendre efficacement l'hôte. L'activation des lymphocytes est transmise par un complexe composé de trois protéines, CARMA1, BCL10 et MALT1, qui régule la voie de signalisation NF-KB lorsque l'antigène est reconnu. L'expression ou l'activité anormalement élevée de l'une de ces trois protéines peut favoriser le développement de lymphomes, tandis que des défauts génétiques de cette voie de signalisation sont associés à l'immunodéficience. MALT1 a été identifiée comme étant une paracaspase qui partage des séquences homologues avec d'autres protéases à cystéine, comme les caspases et les métacaspases. Pour être actives, les caspases ont besoin de dimériser. Etant donné leur similarité de séquence avec MALT1, nous avons supposé que la dimérisation pouvait aussi être un mécanisme d'activation utilisé par MALT1. Pour vérifier cette hypothèse, nous avons conçu un modèle bioinformatique à partir des structures cristallographiques de plusieurs caspases. Et notre modèle a suggéré que le domaine catalytique de MALT1 était effectivement capable de former des dimères. Cette découverte a été confirmée plus tard par des publications qui montrent des structures cristallographiques dimériques de MALT1. Dans l'interface du dimère de notre modèle, nous avons remarqué la présence d'acides aminés chargés qui pouvaient former des liaisons ioniques et ainsi réunir les deux monomères. La mutation de l'un de ces résidus, E549, pour une alanine, a complètement inhibé l'activité catalytique de MALT1. De plus, nous avons mis en évidence un rôle d'E549 dans la croissance dépendante de MALT1, des cellules dérivées de lymphomes B diffus à grandes cellules (DLBCL) de sous-type cellules B actives (ABC). Dans un premier temps nous avons été surpris de constater que cette mutation révélait seulement un défaut partiel de dimérisation, ce qui indique que des acides aminés supplémentaires sont indispensables pour former un dimère stable. Les structures cristallographiques de MALT1 ont révélé un rôle primordial d'E549 dans la stabilisation du site catalytique de la protéase via son interaction avec une arginine qui se trouve à côté de la cystéine du site actif. Dans une autre étude, nous avons découvert que la monoubiquitination de MALT1 est requise pour l'activité catalytique de la protéase. A remarquer que nous avons trouvé que le mutant E549A de l'interface dimère de MALT1 n'a pas pu être monoubiquitiné. Sur la base de ces résultats, nous suggérons que la formation correcte de l'interface du dimère est une condition préalable pour la monoubiquitination. Dans un second projet, nous avons découvert une nouvelle cible de la protéase MALT1, la ribonucléase Regnase-1. Il a été décrit que l'activité RNase de Regnase-1 régulait négativement les réponses immunitaires. Nous avons pu montrer que dans les lignées cellulaires ABC DLBCL, la Regnase-1 n'était pas seulement clivée par MALT1 mais également phosphorylée, au moins en partie, par la kinase de l'inhibiteur de KB (IKK). Les deux régulations semblent supprimer la fonction RNase de Regnase-1 et permettre ainsi la stabilisation de certains ARN messagers et la production de protéines favorisant la survie. En conclusion, nos études mettent en évidence le rôle-clé de la dimérisation de MALT1 et expliquent l'importance de l'activité catalytique de MALT1 pour l'activation des lymphocytes. Ainsi, nos résultats apportent des connaissances supplémentaires pour le développement de médicaments spécifiques ciblant l'activité catalytique de MALT1, qui pourraient être utiles pour modifier les réponses immunitaires et traiter des lymphomes.
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Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) has been implicated in retinal ganglion cells (RGC) degeneration in glaucoma. Atypical protein kinase C (PKC) zeta is involved in cell protection against various stresses. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential proapoptotic effects of intravitreal injections of TNF with or without PKCzeta specific inhibitor on the rat retina. TNF was injected in the vitreous of rat eyes alone or in combination with specific PKCzeta inhibitor. PKCzeta and NF-kappaB were studied by immunohistochemistry and western-blotting analysis on retina, and apoptosis quantified by the TUNEL assay. While low basal PKCzeta was observed in the control eyes, TNF induced intense expression of PKCzeta mostly in bipolar cells processes. PKCzeta staining became nuclear when TNF was coinjected with PKCzeta inhibitor. TNF alone did not induce apoptosis in the retina. Coinjection of the PKCzeta-specific inhibitor and TNF, however, induced apoptosis in the inner nuclear and ganglion cell layers. The PKCzeta-specific inhibitor unmasks retinal cells to TNF cytotoxicity showing a link between the proapoptotic effects of TNF and the antiapoptotic PKCzeta signaling pathway.
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The transcriptional transactivational activities of the phosphoprotein cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) are activated by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase A signaling pathway. Dimers of CREB bind to the palindromic DNA element 5'-TGACGTCA-3' (or similar motifs) called cAMP-responsive enhancers (CREs) found in the control regions of many genes, and activate transcription in response to phosphorylation of CREB by protein kinase A. Earlier we reported on the cyclical expression of the CREB gene in the Sertoli cells of the rat testis that occurred concomitant with the FSH-induced rise in cellular cAMP levels and suggested that transcription of the CREB gene may be autoregulated by cAMP-dependent transcriptional proteins. We now report the structure of the 5'-flanking sequence of the human CREB gene containing promoter activity. The promoter has a high content of guanosines and cytosines and lacks canonical TATA and CCAAT boxes typically found in the promoters of genes in eukaryotes. Notably, the promoter contains three CREs and transcriptional activities of a promoter-luciferase reporter plasmid transfected to placental JEG-3 cells are increased 3- to 5-fold over basal activities in response to either cAMP or 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-14-acetate, and give 6- to 7-fold responses when both agents are added. The CREs bind recombinant CREB and endogenous CREB or CREB-like proteins contained in placental JEG-3 cells and also confer cAMP-inducible transcriptional activation to a heterologous minimal promoter. Our studies suggest that the expression of the CREB gene is positively autoregulated in trans.
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Dans certaines conditions pathologiques, telles que l'hypertension artérielle ou l'infarctus du myocarde, le coeur répond à une augmentation de la post-charge par des processus de remodelage aboutissant à une hypertrophie du ventricule gauche. L'hypertrophie cardiaque est caractérisée par une croissance hypertrophique des cardiomyocytes, ainsi que par une différenciation des fibroblastes en un phenotype présentant une capacité accrue de synthèse protéiques, nommés myofibroblastes. Ceci résulte en une accumulation excessive des constituants de la matrice extracellulaire, ou autrement dit fibrose. En raison de son effet délétère sur la contractilité du coeur, menant sur le long terme à une insuffisance cardiaque, de nombreux efforts ont été déployés, afin de définir les mécanismes moléculaires impliqués dans la réponse profibrotique. A ce jour, de nombreuses études indiquent que la petite GTPase RhoA pourrait être un médiateur important de la réponse profibrotique du myocarde. Cependant, les facteurs d'échanges impliqués dans la transduction de signaux profibrotiques, via la régulation de son activité au niveau des fibroblastes cardiaques, n'ont pas encore été identifiés. De précédentes études menées dans le laboratoire, ont identifiées une nouvelle protein d'ancrage de la PKA, exprimée majoritairement dans le coeur, nommée AKAP-Lbc. Il a été montré que cette protéine, en plus de sa fonction de protein d'ancrage, possédait une activité de facteur d'échange de nucléotide guanine (GEF) pour la petite GTPase RhoA. Au niveau des cardiomyocytes, il a été montré que l'AKAP-Lbc participe à une voie de signalisation pro-hypertrophique, incluant la sous-unité alpha de la protéine G hétérotrimerique G12 et RhoA. Chose intéressante, des observations antérieures à cette étude, indiquent que dans le coeur, l'AKAP-Lbc est également exprimée dans les fibroblastes. Cependant aucunes études n'a encore reporté de fonction pour ce facteur d'échange dans les fibroblastes cardiaques. Dans ce travail, les résultats obtenus indiquent que dans les fibroblastes cardiaques, I'activation de RhoA par l'AKAP-Lbc est impliquée dans la transmission de signaux profibrotiques, en aval des récépteurs à l'angiotensine II. En particulier, nous avons observé que la suppression de l'expression de l'AKAP-Lbc dans les fibroblastes ventriculaires de rat adultes, réduisait fortement Γ activation de Rho induite par l'angiotensine II, la déposition de collagène, la capacité migratoire des fibroblastes ainsi que leur différenciation en myofibroblastes. A notre connaissance, l'AKAP-Lbc est le premier RhoGEF identifié comme médiateur de la réponse profibrotique dans les fibroblastes cardiaques. - In pathological conditions such as chronic hypertension or myocardial infarction, the myocardium is subjected to various biomechanical and biochemical stresses, and undergoes an adverse ventricular remodelling process associated with cardiomyocytes hypertrophy and excess deposition of extracellular matrix proteins resulting in fibrosis. During the fibrotic response, cardiac fibroblasts differentiate into a more mobile and contractile phenotype termed myofibroblasts. These cells, possess a greater synthetic ability to produce ECM proteins and have been implicated in diseases with increased ECM deposition including cardiac fibrosis. Because fibrosis impairs myocardial contractility and is associated with the progression to heart failure, a major cause of lethality worldwide, many efforts have been made to define the molecular players involved in this process. During these last years, increasing evidence suggests a role for the small GTPase RhoA in mediating the fibrotic response in CFbs. However the identity of the exchange factors that modulate its activity and transduce fibrotic signals in CFbs is still unknown. Earlier work in our laboratory identified a novel PKA anchoring protein expressed in the heart termed AKAP-Lbc that has been shown to function as anchoring protein as well as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for the small GTPase RhoA. In response to several hypertrophic stimuli we have shown that RhoGEF activity of AKAP-Lbc mediated by Gan promotes the activation of a signaling pathway including RhoA, leading to cardiomyocytes hypertrophy. Within the heart, previous observations made in the laboratory indicated that AKAP-Lbc was also expressed in fibroblasts. However its role in cardiac fibroblasts remained to be determined. In the present study, we show that AKAP-Lbc is critical for activating RhoA and transducing profibrotic signals downstream of angiotensin II receptors in cardiac fibroblasts. In particular, our results indicate that suppression of AKAP-Lbc expression by infecting adult rat ventricular fibroblasts with lentiviruses encoding AKAP-Lbc specific short hairpin RNAs strongly reduces angiotensin II-induced RhoA activation, collagen deposition as well as cell migration and differentiation. These findings identify AKAP-Lbc as the first Rho-guanine nucleotide exchange factor involved in a profibrotic signalling pathway at the level of cardiac fibroblasts.
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Occupational exposure to metals such as cobalt and beryllium represents a risk factor for respiratory health and can cause immune-mediated diseases. However, the way they act may be different. We show here that the two metals have a divergent effect on peripheral T lymphocytes and monocytes: BeSO(4) induces cell death in monocytes but not in T lymphocytes, which instead respond by producing Interferon gamma (IFN-γ); conversely, CoCl(2) induces apoptosis in T lymphocytes but not in monocytes. Interestingly, both metals induce p53 overexpression but with a dramatic different outcome. This is because the effect of p53 in CoCl(2)-treated monocytes is counteracted by the antiapoptotic activity of cytoplasmic p21(Cip1/WAF1), the activation of nuclear factor κB, and the inflammasome danger signaling pathway leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines. However, CoCl(2)-treated monocytes do not fully differentiate into macrophage or dendritic cells, as inferred by the lack of expression of CD16 and CD83, respectively. Furthermore, the expression of HLA-class II molecules, as well as the capability of capturing and presenting the antigens, decreased with time. In conclusion, cobalt keeps monocytes in a partially activated, proinflammatory state that can contribute to some of the pathologies associated with the exposure to this metal.
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Natural Killer (NK) cells are innate immune cells that can eliminate malignant and foreign cells and that play an important role for the early control of viral and fungal infections. Further, they are important regulators of the adaptive and innate immune responses. During their development in the bone marrow (BM) NK cells undergo several maturation steps that directly establish an effector program. The transcriptional network that controls NK cell development and maturation is still incompletely understood. Based on earlier findings that NK cell numbers are reduced in the absence of the transcription factor T cell factor-1 (Tcf-1), my thesis has addressed the precise role of this transcription factor for NK cell development, maturation and function and whether Tcf-1 acts as a nuclear effector of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway to mediate its effects. It is shown that Tcf-1 is selectively required for the emergence of mature BM NK cells. Surprisingly, the emergence of BM NK cells depends on the repressor function of Tcf-1 and is independent of the Wnt pathway. In BM and peripheral NK cells Tcf-1 is found to suppress Granzyme B (GzmB) expression, a key cytotoxic effector molecule required to kill target cells. We provide evidence that GzmB over-expression in the absence of Tcf-1 results in accelerated spontaneous death of bone marrow NK cells and of cytokine stimulated peripheral NK cells. Moreover, Tcf-1 deficient NK cells show reduced target cell killing, which is due to enhanced GzmB-dependent NK cell death induced by the recognition of tumour target cells. Collectively, these data provide significant new insights into the transcriptional regulation of NK cell development and function and suggest a novel mechanism that protects NK cells from the deleterious effects of highly cytotoxic effector molecules. - Les cellules NK (de l'anglais Natural Killer) font partie du système immunitaire inné et sont capables d'éliminer à elles seules les cellules cancéreuses ou infectées. Ces cellules participent dans la régulation et la coordination des réponses innée et adaptative. Lors de leur développement dans la moelle osseuse, les cellules NK vont acquérir leurs fonctions effectrices, un processus contrôlé par des facteurs de transcription mais encore peu connu. Des précédentes travaux ont montré qu'une diminution du nombre de cellules NK corrélait avec l'absence du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 (T cell factor-1), suggérant un rôle important de Tcf-1 dans le développement de cellules NK. Cette thèse a pour but de mieux comprendre le rôle du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 lors du développement et la maturation des cellules NK, ainsi que son interaction avec la voie de signalisation Wnt. Nous avons montré que Tcf-1 est essentiel pour la transition des cellules immatures NK (iNK) à des cellules matures NK (mNK) dans la moelle osseuse, et cela de manière indépendamment de la voie de signalisation Wnt. De manière intéressante, nous avons observé qu'en absence du facteur de transcription Tcf-1, les cellules NK augmentaient l'expression de la protéine Granzyme B (GzmB), une protéine essentielle pour l'élimination des cellules cancéreuses ou infectées. Ceci a pour conséquence, une augmentation de la mort des cellules mNK dans la moelle osseuse ainsi qu'une diminution de leur fonction «tueuses». Ces résultats montrent pour la première fois, le rôle répresseur du facteur de transcription Tcf-1 dans l'expression de la protéine GzmB. L'ensemble de ces résultats apporte de nouveaux éléments concernant le rôle de Tcf-1 dans la régulation du développement et de la fonction des cellules NK et suggèrent un nouveau mécanisme cellulaire de protection contre les effets délétères d'une dérégulation de l'expression des molécules cytotoxique.
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The cytokine BAFF binds to the receptors TACI, BCMA, and BAFF-R on B cells, whereas APRIL binds to TACI and BCMA only. The signaling properties of soluble trimeric BAFF (BAFF 3-mer) were compared with those of higher-order BAFF oligomers. All forms of BAFF bound BAFF-R and TACI, and elicited BAFF-R-dependent signals in primary B cells. In contrast, signaling through TACI in mature B cells or plasmablasts was only achieved by higher-order BAFF and APRIL oligomers, all of which were also po-tent activators of a multimerization-dependent reporter signaling pathway. These results indicate that, although BAFF-R and TACI can provide B cells with similar signals, only BAFF-R, but not TACI, can respond to soluble BAFF 3-mer, which is the main form of BAFF found in circulation. BAFF 60-mer, an efficient TACI agonist, was also detected in plasma of BAFF transgenic and nontransgenic mice and was more than 100-fold more active than BAFF 3-mer for the activation of multimerization-dependent signals. TACI supported survival of activated B cells and plasmablasts in vitro, providing a rational basis to explain the immunoglobulin deficiency reported in TACI-deficient persons.