T cell responses are highly regulated to assure appropriate and effective responses to infectious and inflammatory stimuli. A key component of this is the B7:CD28 receptor family, consisting of activating (CD28 and ICOS) and inhibitory (CTLA-4, PD-1 and BTLA) members and their ligands (B7 proteins). These receptors play a critical role in regulating lung inflammation by determining whether an immune response is initiated, and once initiated, its resolution. The goal of the studies proposed in this application is to define novel mechanisms by which the B7:CD28 family regulates the initiation and resolution of lung inflammation, and determine how this can be manipulated to therapeutic advantage. To study the molecular mechanisms controlling the initiation of inflammation, we developed gene targeted CD28-mutant knockin mice. Using these we established which signaling motifs mediate specific in vitro and in vivo CD28-dependent functions. In contrast to the prevailing dogma that PI3 kinase signaling initiated by the proximal tyrosine (Y170) motif is the critical pathway activated by CD28, we demonstrated that it is in fact dispensable for CD28 function. However, we showed that the distal proline (PYAP) motif initiated a non- redundant signaling pathway required for normal CD28-dependent responses. Despite mutation of this motif, some function remains the biochemical basis for which is unknown. Therefore, we hypothesize that novel pathways activated independent of the distal proline motif regulate CD28-dependent T cell proliferation and cytokine secretion. We further found that signaling initiated by the distal proline motif is essential for T cell: B cell collaboration and T-dependent antibody production. The signaling pathways that mediate these responses will be determined in specific aim 1 of this proposal. Ongoing inflammation can be inhibited by therapeutic manipulation of the B7:CD28 pathway using the recently approved drug CTLA4Ig, (abatacept, OrenciaTM). This drug binds to B7-1 (CD80) and B7-2 (CD86), and has been presumed to function by preventing CD28 engagement on the T cell, thereby preventing a CD28-mediated signal to the T cell. While this mechanism is true for initial T cell activation, we have established that in fact CTLA4Ig inhibits effector responses by a novel CD28-independent, inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS2)-dependent mechanism. We further show that IFN3/STAT1 signaling is central in this response. We hypothesize that B7 engagement by CTLA4Ig induces INF3 dependent activation of macrophages or myeloid derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), and that these inhibit allergic lung inflammation by a NOS2-dependent mechanism. In this application, we propose cellular, molecular and in vivo studies to determine the mechanism of the novel mode of action for CTLA4Ig., which may have broad applicability to therapeutic manipulation of inflammatory lung disease

Public Health Relevance

This proposal is to study the control of lung inflammation by group of receptors called the B7:CD28 family. These receptors control how the immune system fights infection and are also important in diseases such as asthma. By understanding how these receptors work, we can design new therapies that may help patients with a number of lung diseases. )

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01HL062683-10A1
Application #
8186722
Study Section
Lung Cellular, Molecular, and Immunobiology Study Section (LCMI)
Program Officer
Noel, Patricia
Project Start
2000-02-15
Project End
2015-05-31
Budget Start
2011-07-15
Budget End
2012-05-31
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$380,000
Indirect Cost
Name
Washington University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
068552207
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63130
Gmyrek, Grzegorz B; Pingel, Jeanette; Choi, Jaehyuk et al. (2017) Functional analysis of acquired CD28 mutations identified in cutaneous T cell lymphoma. Cell Immunol 319:28-34
Rozanski, Cheryl H; Utley, Adam; Carlson, Louise M et al. (2015) CD28 Promotes Plasma Cell Survival, Sustained Antibody Responses, and BLIMP-1 Upregulation through Its Distal PYAP Proline Motif. J Immunol 194:4717-28
Mahmud, Shawn A; Manlove, Luke S; Schmitz, Heather M et al. (2014) Costimulation via the tumor-necrosis factor receptor superfamily couples TCR signal strength to the thymic differentiation of regulatory T cells. Nat Immunol 15:473-81
Boomer, Jonathan S; Deppong, Christine M; Shah, Dulari D et al. (2014) Cutting edge: A double-mutant knockin of the CD28 YMNM and PYAP motifs reveals a critical role for the YMNM motif in regulation of T cell proliferation and Bcl-xL expression. J Immunol 192:3465-9
Deppong, Christine M; Bricker, Traci L; Rannals, Brandy D et al. (2013) CTLA4Ig inhibits effector T cells through regulatory T cells and TGF-?. J Immunol 191:3082-9
Deppong, Christine M; Green, Jonathan M (2013) Experimental advances in understanding allergic airway inflammation. Front Biosci (Schol Ed) 5:167-80
Pagán, Antonio J; Pepper, Marion; Chu, H Hamlet et al. (2012) CD28 promotes CD4+ T cell clonal expansion during infection independently of its YMNM and PYAP motifs. J Immunol 189:2909-17
Deppong, Christine M; Xu, Jian; Brody, Steven L et al. (2012) Airway epithelial cells suppress T cell proliferation by an IFN?/STAT1/TGF?-dependent mechanism. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 302:L167-73
Vang, Kieng B; Yang, Jianying; Pagán, Antonio J et al. (2010) Cutting edge: CD28 and c-Rel-dependent pathways initiate regulatory T cell development. J Immunol 184:4074-7
Boomer, Jonathan S; Green, Jonathan M (2010) An enigmatic tail of CD28 signaling. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol 2:a002436

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