We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Protein kinase CK2 enables regulatory T cells to suppress excessive T<sub>H</sub>2 responses in vivo.
- Authors
Ulges, Alexander; Klein, Matthias; Reuter, Sebastian; Gerlitzki, Bastian; Hoffmann, Markus; Grebe, Nadine; Staudt, Valérie; Stergiou, Natascha; Bohn, Toszka; Brühl, Till-Julius; Muth, Sabine; Yurugi, Hajime; Rajalingam, Krishnaraj; Bellinghausen, Iris; Tuettenberg, Andrea; Hahn, Susanne; Reißig, Sonja; Haben, Irma; Zipp, Frauke; Waisman, Ari
- Abstract
The quality of the adaptive immune response depends on the differentiation of distinct CD4+ helper T cell subsets, and the magnitude of an immune response is controlled by CD4+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Treg cells). However, how a tissue- and cell type-specific suppressor program of Treg cells is mechanistically orchestrated has remained largely unexplored. Through the use of Treg cell-specific gene targeting, we found that the suppression of allergic immune responses in the lungs mediated by T helper type 2 (TH2) cells was dependent on the activity of the protein kinase CK2. Genetic ablation of the β-subunit of CK2 specifically in Treg cells resulted in the proliferation of a hitherto-unexplored ILT3+ Treg cell subpopulation that was unable to control the maturation of IRF4+PD-L2+ dendritic cells required for the development of TH2 responses in vivo.
- Subjects
PROTEIN kinase CK2; T cell differentiation; CELLULAR control mechanisms; IMMUNOSUPPRESSION; TH2 cells; CD4 antigen; GENE targeting
- Publication
Nature Immunology, 2015, Vol 16, Issue 3, p267
- ISSN
1529-2908
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/ni.3083