T cell sensitivity to antigens is intrinsically regulated during lymphocyte development and maturation to ensure proper development of immunity and tolerance, but how this is accomplished remains elusive. MicroRNAs (miRNAs), an abundant class of ~22-nucleotide (nt) small noncoding RNAs, have emerged as important players in animal development, the pathogenesis of cancers, and immune responses. Among them, miR-181a is preferentially expressed during lymphocyte development and plays important roles in T and B cell development. Increasing miR-181a expression in mature T cells augments the sensitivity to peptide antigens, whereas inhibiting miR-181a expression in immature T cells reduces sensitivity and impairs both positive and negative selection. Interestingly, quantitative regulation of T cell sensitivity by miR-181a enables mature T cells to recognize antagonists--the inhibitory peptide antigens--as agonists, suggesting that quantitative regulation of antigen sensitivity could result in a shift in the activation threshold in T cells. Supporting the idea that miR-181a may function as an intrinsic antigen-sensitivity `rheostat'during T cell development is that higher miR-181a expression seems to correlate with greater T cell sensitivity in various T cell populations. The proposed research plan will examine the function of the mir-181 family genes in regulating T cell sensitivity to antigens during lymphocyte development, selection, and function, and will further test the effects of tuning miRNA expression on the development of tolerance. Specifically, we will use loss-of-function approaches, including pharmacological (antagomir knock-down) and genetic (targeted deletions in mice) approaches, to reduce or abrogate the expression of the mir-181 family genes in DP cells, in order to determine the roles these miRNA genes play in controlling TCR signaling strength in DP thymocytes and in influencing positive and negative selection (Specific Aim 1). We will also characterize the roles of the mir-181 family genes in the development of the peripheral T cell receptor repertoire as well as naive and memory T cells (Specific Aim 2). Finally, we will investigate the functions of the mir-181 family genes in early T cell development in the thymus by controlling the pre-TCR and Notch signaling pathways (Specific Aim 3).

Public Health Relevance

The proposed study will provide fundamental insight as to how aberrant miRNA expression may contribute to the pathogeneses of autoimmune diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and type-1 autoimmune diabetes.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01AI073724-01A2
Application #
7580673
Study Section
Cellular and Molecular Immunology - B Study Section (CMIB)
Program Officer
Prabhudas, Mercy R
Project Start
2009-05-01
Project End
2014-04-30
Budget Start
2009-05-01
Budget End
2010-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$401,594
Indirect Cost
Name
Stanford University
Department
Microbiology/Immun/Virology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
009214214
City
Stanford
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94305
Burns, Tyler J; Frei, Andreas P; Gherardini, Pier F et al. (2017) High-throughput precision measurement of subcellular localization in single cells. Cytometry A 91:180-189
Anchang, Benedict; Hart, Tom D P; Bendall, Sean C et al. (2016) Visualization and cellular hierarchy inference of single-cell data using SPADE. Nat Protoc 11:1264-79
Angst, Martin S; Fragiadakis, Gabriela K; Gaudillière, Brice et al. (2016) In Reply. Anesthesiology 124:1414-5
Schaffert, Steven A; Loh, Christina; Wang, Song et al. (2015) mir-181a-1/b-1 Modulates Tolerance through Opposing Activities in Selection and Peripheral T Cell Function. J Immunol 195:1470-9
Behbehani, Gregory K; Samusik, Nikolay; Bjornson, Zach B et al. (2015) Mass Cytometric Functional Profiling of Acute Myeloid Leukemia Defines Cell-Cycle and Immunophenotypic Properties That Correlate with Known Responses to Therapy. Cancer Discov 5:988-1003
Spitzer, Matthew H; Gherardini, Pier Federico; Fragiadakis, Gabriela K et al. (2015) IMMUNOLOGY. An interactive reference framework for modeling a dynamic immune system. Science 349:1259425
Zunder, Eli R; Finck, Rachel; Behbehani, Gregory K et al. (2015) Palladium-based mass tag cell barcoding with a doublet-filtering scheme and single-cell deconvolution algorithm. Nat Protoc 10:316-33
O'Gorman, William E; Hsieh, Elena W Y; Savig, Erica S et al. (2015) Single-cell systems-level analysis of human Toll-like receptor activation defines a chemokine signature in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. J Allergy Clin Immunol 136:1326-36
Zunder, Eli R; Lujan, Ernesto; Goltsev, Yury et al. (2015) A continuous molecular roadmap to iPSC reprogramming through progression analysis of single-cell mass cytometry. Cell Stem Cell 16:323-37
ElSohly, Adel M; Netirojjanakul, Chawita; Aanei, Ioana L et al. (2015) Synthetically Modified Viral Capsids as Versatile Carriers for Use in Antibody-Based Cell Targeting. Bioconjug Chem 26:1590-6

Showing the most recent 10 out of 20 publications