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    Date Issued2015 (1)2014 (2)2007 (1)2005 (1)Author
    Schwartzberg, Pamela L. (5)
    Berg, Leslie J. (4)Prince, Amanda L. (2)Anderson, Stacie (1)Bosselut, Remy (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Pathology (4)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (1)Program in Gene Function and Expression (1)Document TypeJournal Article (5)KeywordImmunology and Infectious Disease (2)Immunopathology (2)*Chromosome Inversion (1)Animals (1)Animals; Antigens, CD1d; CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes; CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes; Cell Differentiation; Cell Proliferation; Flow Cytometry; Interleukin-15; Interleukin-4; Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Natural Killer T-Cells; Protein-Tyrosine Kinases; Rats; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, gamma-delta; Signal Transduction; T-Box Domain Proteins; Thymocytes (1)View MoreJournalJournal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2)Annual review of immunology (1)Blood (1)Cell reports (1)

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    TCF1 Is Required for the T Follicular Helper Cell Response to Viral Infection

    Wu, Tuoqi; Shin, HyunMu; Moseman, E. Ashley; Ji, Yun; Huang, Bonnie; Harly, Christelle; Sen, Jyoti M.; Berg, Leslie J.; Gattinoni, Luca; McGavern, Dorian B.; et al. (2015-09-29)
    T follicular helper (TFH) and T helper 1 (Th1) cells generated after viral infections are critical for the control of infection and the development of immunological memory. However, the mechanisms that govern the differentiation and maintenance of these two distinct lineages during viral infection remain unclear. We found that viral-specific TFH and Th1 cells showed reciprocal expression of the transcriptions factors TCF1 and Blimp1 early after infection, even before the differential expression of the canonical TFH marker CXCR5. Furthermore, TCF1 was intrinsically required for the TFH cell response to viral infection; in the absence of TCF1, the TFH cell response was severely compromised, and the remaining TCF1-deficient TFH cells failed to maintain TFH-associated transcriptional and metabolic signatures, which were distinct from those in Th1 cells. Mechanistically, TCF1 functioned through forming negative feedback loops with IL-2 and Blimp1. Our findings demonstrate an essential role of TCF1 in TFH cell responses to viral infection.
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    Development of innate CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in Itk-deficient mice is regulated by distinct pathways

    Prince, Amanda L.; Kraus, Zachary; Carty, Shannon A.; Ng, Caleb; Yin, Catherine C.; Jordan, Martha S.; Schwartzberg, Pamela L.; Berg, Leslie J. (2014-07-15)
    T cell development in the thymus produces multiple lineages of cells, including innate T cells such as gammadelta TCR(+) cells, invariant NKT cells, mucosal-associated invariant T cells, and H2-M3-specific cells. Although innate cells are generally a minor subset of thymocytes, in several strains of mice harboring mutations in T cell signaling proteins or transcriptional regulators, conventional CD8(+) T cells develop as innate cells with characteristics of memory T cells. Thus, in Itk-deficient mice, mature CD4(-)CD8(+) (CD8 single-positive [SP]) thymocytes express high levels of the transcription factor eomesodermin (Eomes) and are dependent on IL-4 being produced in the thymic environment by a poorly characterized subset of CD4(+) thymocytes expressing the transcriptional regulator promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger. In this study, we show that a sizeable proportion of mature CD4(+)CD8(-) (CD4SP) thymocytes in itk(-/-) mice also develop as innate Eomes-expressing T cells. These cells are dependent on MHC class II and IL-4 signaling for their development, indicating that they are conventional CD4(+) T cells that have been converted to an innate phenotype. Surprisingly, neither CD4SP nor CD8SP innate Eomes(+) thymocytes in itk(-/-) or SLP-76(Y145F) mice are dependent on gammadelta T cells for their development. Instead, we find that the predominant population of Eomes(+) innate itk(-/-) CD4SP thymocytes is largely absent in mice lacking CD1d-specific invariant NKT cells, with no effect on innate itk(-/-) CD8SP thymocytes. In contrast, both subsets of innate Eomes(+)itk(-/-) T cells require the presence of a novel promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger-expressing, SLAM family receptor adapter protein-dependent thymocyte population that is essential for the conversion of conventional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells into innate T cells with a memory phenotype.
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    Innate PLZF+CD4+ alphabeta T cells develop and expand in the absence of Itk

    Prince, Amanda L.; Watkin, Levi B.; Yin, Catherine C; Selin, Liisa K.; Kang, Joonso; Schwartzberg, Pamela L.; Berg, Leslie J. (2014-07-15)
    T cell development in the thymus produces multiple lineages of cells, including innate T cells. Studies in mice harboring alterations in TCR signaling proteins or transcriptional regulators have revealed an expanded population of CD4(+) innate T cells in the thymus that produce IL-4 and express the transcription factor promyelocytic leukemia zinc finger (PLZF). In these mice, IL-4 produced by the CD4(+)PLZF(+) T cell population leads to the conversion of conventional CD8(+) thymocytes into innate CD8(+) T cells resembling memory T cells expressing eomesodermin. The expression of PLZF, the signature invariant NKT cell transcription factor, in these innate CD4(+) T cells suggests that they might be a subset of alphabeta or gammadelta TCR(+) NKT cells or mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells. To address these possibilities, we characterized the CD4(+)PLZF(+) innate T cells in itk(-/-) mice. We show that itk(-/-) innate PLZF(+)CD4(+) T cells are not CD1d-dependent NKT cells, MR1-dependent MAIT cells, or gammadelta T cells. Furthermore, although the itk(-/-) innate PLZF(+)CD4(+) T cells express alphabeta TCRs, neither beta2-microglobulin-dependent MHC class I nor any MHC class II molecules are required for their development. In contrast to invariant NKT cells and MAIT cells, this population has a highly diverse TCRalpha-chain repertoire. Analysis of peripheral tissues indicates that itk(-/-) innate PLZF(+)CD4(+) T cells preferentially home to spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes owing to increased expression of gut-homing receptors, and that their expansion is regulated by commensal gut flora. These data support the conclusion that itk(-/-) innate PLZF(+)CD4(+) T cells are a novel subset of innate T cells.
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    CBFB-MYH11 hinders early T-cell development and induces massive cell death in the thymus

    Zhao, Ling; Cannons, Jennifer; Anderson, Stacie; Kirby, Martha; Xu, Liping; Castilla, Lucio H.; Schwartzberg, Pamela L.; Bosselut, Remy; Liu, P. Paul (2007-04-23)
    Recent studies suggest that the chromosome 16 inversion, associated with acute myeloid leukemia M4Eo, takes place in hematopoietic stem cells. If this is the case, it is of interest to know the effects of the resulting fusion gene, CBFB-MYH11, on other lineages. Here we studied T-cell development in mice expressing Cbfb-MYH11 and compared them with mice compound-heterozygous for a Cbfb null and a hypomorphic GFP knock-in allele (Cbfb(-/GFP)), which had severe Cbfb deficiency. We found a differentiation block at the DN1 stage of thymocyte development in Cbfb-MYH11 knock-in chimeras. In a conditional knock-in model in which Cbfb-MYH11 expression was activated by Lck-Cre, there was a 10-fold reduction in thymocyte numbers in adult thymus, resulting mainly from impaired survival of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes. Although Cbfb-MYH11 derepressed CD4 expression efficiently in reporter assays, such derepression was less pronounced in vivo. On the other hand, CD4 expression was derepressed and thymocyte development was blocked at DN1 and DN2 stages in E17.5 Cbfb(-/GFP) thymus, with a 20-fold reduction of total thymocyte numbers. Our data suggest that Cbfb-MYH11 suppressed Cbfb in several stages of T-cell development and provide a mechanism for CBFB-MYH11 association with myeloid but not lymphoid leukemia.
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    Tec family kinases in T lymphocyte development and function

    Berg, Leslie J.; Finkelstein, Lisa D.; Lucas, Julie Ann; Schwartzberg, Pamela L. (2005-03-18)
    The Tec family tyrosine kinases are now recognized as important mediators of antigen receptor signaling in lymphocytes. Three members of this family, Itk, Rlk, and Tec, are expressed in T cells and activated in response to T cell receptor (TCR) engagement. Although initial studies demonstrated a role for these proteins in TCR-mediated activation of phospholipase C-gamma, recent data indicate that Tec family kinases also regulate actin cytoskeletal reorganization and cellular adhesion following TCR stimulation. In addition, Tec family kinases are activated downstream of G protein-coupled chemokine receptors, where they play parallel roles in the regulation of Rho GTPases, cell polarization, adhesion, and migration. In all these systems, however, Tec family kinases are not essential signaling components, but instead function to modulate or amplify signaling pathways. Although they quantitatively reduce proximal signaling, mutations that eliminate Tec family kinases in T cells nonetheless qualitatively alter T cell development and differentiation.
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