CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation

The signal threshold for the activation of a naïve T cell upon recognising its antigen is regulated tightly by the CD28/CTLA-4 - CD80/86 pathway. Within this framework, CTLA-4 has been shown to limit the availability of co-stimulation by physical removal of CD80 and CD86 from the APC, via the mecha...

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Main Author: Ovcinnikovs, Vitalijs
Published: University College London (University of London) 2018
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.763253
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7632532019-02-12T03:26:26ZCTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulationOvcinnikovs, Vitalijs2018The signal threshold for the activation of a naïve T cell upon recognising its antigen is regulated tightly by the CD28/CTLA-4 - CD80/86 pathway. Within this framework, CTLA-4 has been shown to limit the availability of co-stimulation by physical removal of CD80 and CD86 from the APC, via the mechanism of trans-endocytosis (TE). The study presented in this thesis explores CTLA-4-mediated modulation of CD80 and CD86 as it occurs in vitro and in vivo. It is revealed that regulatory T cells, highly enriched in CTLA-4, are able to rapidly recruit it to the cell surface and trans-endocytose CD80 and CD86 upon stimulation. As a result, Treg, but not Tconv, within hours can significantly reduce the level of co-stimulation on DCs. Although both CD80 and CD86 can be readily taken up by CTLA-4, CD80 is the dominant ligand that it preferentially downregulated from APCs in a competitive scenario. Furthermore, CD28 signalling, in addition to TCR, is identified as a requirement for effective CTLA-4 function. In vivo, co-stimulation is shown to dictate the magnitude of a T cell response in a digital manner. Accordingly, Treg suppress Tconv expansion in a way that is consistent with reduced co-stimulation as a consequence of TE. By using antigen presenting cells that express fluorescently-tagged CD80 and CD86, it is revealed that Treg use CTLA-4 to capture its ligands across tissues in the steady state. Thereby, the phenotype of the APC is constantly modulated. Perturbing CTLA-4 identifies that the lymph node migratory DCs are the main target for CTLA-4 control, while CD80 is confirmed to be the preferred ligand. Finally, Treg-expressed CD80 and CD86 is shown to act as a tuning mechanism that restricts homeostatic activation, suppressive capability and TE. Together, these data provide new insight into how CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis may routinely prevent self-reactive immune activation.University College London (University of London)https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.763253http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10059309/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
description The signal threshold for the activation of a naïve T cell upon recognising its antigen is regulated tightly by the CD28/CTLA-4 - CD80/86 pathway. Within this framework, CTLA-4 has been shown to limit the availability of co-stimulation by physical removal of CD80 and CD86 from the APC, via the mechanism of trans-endocytosis (TE). The study presented in this thesis explores CTLA-4-mediated modulation of CD80 and CD86 as it occurs in vitro and in vivo. It is revealed that regulatory T cells, highly enriched in CTLA-4, are able to rapidly recruit it to the cell surface and trans-endocytose CD80 and CD86 upon stimulation. As a result, Treg, but not Tconv, within hours can significantly reduce the level of co-stimulation on DCs. Although both CD80 and CD86 can be readily taken up by CTLA-4, CD80 is the dominant ligand that it preferentially downregulated from APCs in a competitive scenario. Furthermore, CD28 signalling, in addition to TCR, is identified as a requirement for effective CTLA-4 function. In vivo, co-stimulation is shown to dictate the magnitude of a T cell response in a digital manner. Accordingly, Treg suppress Tconv expansion in a way that is consistent with reduced co-stimulation as a consequence of TE. By using antigen presenting cells that express fluorescently-tagged CD80 and CD86, it is revealed that Treg use CTLA-4 to capture its ligands across tissues in the steady state. Thereby, the phenotype of the APC is constantly modulated. Perturbing CTLA-4 identifies that the lymph node migratory DCs are the main target for CTLA-4 control, while CD80 is confirmed to be the preferred ligand. Finally, Treg-expressed CD80 and CD86 is shown to act as a tuning mechanism that restricts homeostatic activation, suppressive capability and TE. Together, these data provide new insight into how CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis may routinely prevent self-reactive immune activation.
author Ovcinnikovs, Vitalijs
spellingShingle Ovcinnikovs, Vitalijs
CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
author_facet Ovcinnikovs, Vitalijs
author_sort Ovcinnikovs, Vitalijs
title CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
title_short CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
title_full CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
title_fullStr CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
title_full_unstemmed CTLA-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of T cell co-stimulation
title_sort ctla-4-mediated trans-endocytosis in the control of t cell co-stimulation
publisher University College London (University of London)
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.763253
work_keys_str_mv AT ovcinnikovsvitalijs ctla4mediatedtransendocytosisinthecontroloftcellcostimulation
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