Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hung-Sia Teh is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hung-Sia Teh.


Immunity | 2002

RasGRP1 transduces low-grade TCR signals which are critical for T cell development, homeostasis, and differentiation.

John J. Priatel; Soo-Jeet Teh; Nancy A. Dower; James C. Stone; Hung-Sia Teh

Two important Ras-guanyl nucleotide exchange factors, Sos and RasGRP1, control Ras activation in thymocytes. However, the relative contribution of these two exchange factors to Ras/ERK activation and their resulting impact on positive and negative selection is unclear. We have produced two lines of RasGRP1(-/-) TCR transgenic mice to determine the effect of RasGRP1 in T cell development under conditions of defined TCR signaling. Our results demonstrate that RasGRP1 is crucial for thymocytes expressing weakly selecting TCRs whereas those that express stronger selecting TCRs are more effective at utilizing RasGRP1-independent mechanisms for ERK activation and positive selection. Analysis of RasGRP1(-/-) peripheral T cells also revealed hitherto unidentified functions of RasGRP1 in regulating T cell homeostasis and sustaining antigen-induced developmental programming.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

TNF Type 2 Receptor (p75) Lowers the Threshold of T Cell Activation

Edward Y. Kim; Hung-Sia Teh

T cell activation requires a threshold amount of TCR-mediated signals, an amount that is reduced by signals mediated through costimulatory molecules expressed on the T cell surface. Here the role of TNFR2 (p75) as a putative costimulatory receptor for T cell activation was examined. It was found that p75 deficiency in CD8+ T cells increased the requirements for TCR agonist approximately 5-fold. Furthermore, p75−/− T cells display a marked reduction in the proliferative response to TCR agonist. This hypoproliferative response was associated with delayed kinetics of induction of the acute activation markers CD25 and CD69 as well as a marked decrease in the production of IL-2 and IFN-γ. The net result is that very few cells are recruited into the dividing population. Interestingly, CD28 costimulation was only partially effective in rescuing the proliferative defect of p75−/−CD8+ T cells. Thus, p75 provides an important costimulatory signal in addition to that provided by CD28 toward optimal T cell proliferation.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

TNF Receptor Type 2 (p75) Functions as a Costimulator for Antigen-Driven T Cell Responses In Vivo

Edward Y. Kim; John J. Priatel; Soo-Jeet Teh; Hung-Sia Teh

Naive T cells require costimulation for robust Ag-driven differentiation and survival. Members of the TNFR family have been shown to provide costimulatory signals conferring survival at distinct phases of the T cell response. In this study, we show that CD4 and CD8 T cells depend on TNFR type 2 (p75) for survival during clonal expansion, allowing larger accumulation of effector cells and conferring protection from apoptosis for a robust memory pool in vivo. We demonstrate using the MHC class I-restricted 2C TCR and MHC class II-restricted AND TCR transgenic systems that TNFR2 regulates the threshold for clonal expansion of CD4 and CD8 T cell subsets in response to cognate Ag. Using a novel recombinant Listeria monocytogenes (rLM) expressing a secreted form of the 2C agonist peptide (SIY) to investigate the role of TNFR2 for T cell immunity in vivo, we found that TNFR2 controls the survival and accumulation of effector cells during the primary response. TNFR2−/− CD8 T cells exhibit loss of protection from apoptosis that is correlated with diminished survivin and Bcl-2 expression. Null mutant mice were more susceptible to rLM-SIY challenge at high doses of primary infection, correlating with impaired LM-specific T cell response in the absence of TNFR2-mediated costimulation. Moreover, the resulting memory pools specific for SIY and listeriolysin O epitopes derived from rLM-SIY were diminished in TNFR2−/− mice. Thus, examination of Ag-driven T cell responses revealed a hitherto unknown costimulatory function for TNFR2 in regulating T cell survival during the differentiation program elicited by intracellular pathogen in vivo.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Critical Role of TNF Receptor Type-2 (p75) as a Costimulator for IL-2 Induction and T Cell Survival: A Functional Link to CD28

Edward Y. Kim; Hung-Sia Teh

CD28 provides important signals that lower the threshold of T cell activation, augment the production of IL-2, and promote T cell survival. The recent identification of a second family of costimulatory molecules within the TNFR family has reshaped the “two-signal” model of T cell activation. In this study the role of p75 as a T cell costimulatory molecule in controlling cell fate during TCR/CD28-mediated stimulation was examined. We found that p75-deficient T cells possess a profound defect in IL-2 production in response to TCR/CD28-mediated stimulation. Examination of key signaling intermediates revealed that TCR proximal events such as global tyrosine phosphorylation and ZAP70 phosphorylation, as well as downstream MAPK cascades are unperturbed in p75-deficient T cells. In contrast, p75 is nonredundantly coupled to sustained AKT activity and NF-κB activation in response to TCR/CD28-mediated stimulation. Moreover, p75-deficient T cells possess a defect in survival during the early phase of T cell activation that is correlated with a striking defect in Bcl-xL expression. These data indicate discrete effects of p75 on the intracellular signaling milieu during T cell activation, and reveal the synergistic requirement of TCR, CD28, and p75 toward optimal IL-2 induction and T cell survival. We propose that p75 acts as one of the earliest of the identified costimulatory members of the TNFR family, and is functionally linked to CD28 for initiating and determining T cell fate during activation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

Constitutive tyrosine phosphorylation of the T-cell receptor (TCR) zeta subunit: regulation of TCR-associated protein tyrosine kinase activity by TCR zeta.

N. Van Oers; Wen Tao; Julian D. Watts; P. Johnson; R. Aebersold; Hung-Sia Teh

The T-cell receptor (TCR) zeta subunit is an important component of the TCR complex, involved in signal transduction events following TCR engagement. In this study, we showed that the TCR zeta chain is constitutively tyrosine phosphorylated to similar extents in thymocytes and lymph node T cells. Approximately 35% of the tyrosine-phosphorylated TCR zeta (phospho zeta) precipitated from total cell lysates appeared to be surface associated. Furthermore, constitutive phosphorylation of TCR zeta in T cells occurred independently of antigen stimulation and did not require CD4 or CD8 coreceptor expression. In lymph node T cells that constitutively express tyrosine-phosphorylated TCR zeta, there was a direct correlation between surface TCR-associated protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) activity and expression of phospho zeta. TCR stimulation of these cells resulted in an increase in PTK activity that coprecipitated with the surface TCR complex and a corresponding increase in the levels of phospho zeta. TCR ligations also contributed to the detection of several additional phosphoproteins that coprecipitated with surface TCR complexes, including a 72-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated protein. The presence of TCR-associated PTK activity also correlated with the binding of a 72-kDa protein, which became tyrosine phosphorylated in vitro kinase assays, to tyrosine phosphorylated TCR zeta. The cytoplasmic region of the TCR zeta chain was synthesized, tyrosine phosphorylated, and conjugated to Sepharose beads. Only tyrosine-phosphorylated, not nonphosphorylated, TCR zeta beads were capable of immunoprecipitating the 72-kDa protein from total cell lysates. This 72-kDa protein is likely the murine equivalent of human PTK ZAP-70, which has been shown to associate specifically with phospho zeta. These results suggest that TCR-associated PTK activity is regulated, at least in part, by the tyrosine phosphorylation status of TCR zeta.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

TCR/Self-Antigen Interactions Drive Double-Negative T Cell Peripheral Expansion and Differentiation into Suppressor Cells

John J. Priatel; Oliver Utting; Hung-Sia Teh

Mature CD4−CD8− αβ+ T cells (DNTC) in the periphery of TCR transgenic mice are resistant to clonal deletion in cognate Ag-expressing (Ag+) mice. Previously, we have characterized DNTC populations bearing the alloreactive 2C TCR in Ag-free (Ag−) and Ag+ mice. Despite appearing functionally anergic when challenged with cognate Ag in vitro, Ag-experienced DNTC exhibit markers of activation/memory, a lowered threshold of activation, ex vivo cytolytic activity, and the ability to rapidly secrete IFN-γ. Remarkably, these memory-like DNTC also possess potent immunoregulatory properties, competing effectively for bystander-produced IL-2 and suppressing autoreactive CD8+ T cell proliferation via a Fas/FasL-dependent cytolytic mechanism. The fact that DNTC recovered from Ag+ mice possess markers and attributes characteristic of naive CD8+ T cells that have undergone homeostasis-induced proliferation suggested that they may be derived from a similar peripheral expansion process. Naive DNTC adoptively transferred into Ag-bearing hosts rapidly acquire markers and functional attributes of DNTC that have continually developed in the presence of Ag. Thus, the peripheral selection and maintenance of such autoreactive cells may serve to negatively regulate potential autoimmune T cell responses.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2007

Impaired CD8 T cell memory and CD4 T cell primary responses in IL-7Rα mutant mice

Lisa C. Osborne; Salim Dhanji; Jonathan W. Snow; John J. Priatel; Melissa C. Ma; M. Jill Miners; Hung-Sia Teh; Mark A. Goldsmith; Ninan Abraham

Loss of interleukin (IL)-7 or the IL-7 receptor alpha (IL-7Rα, CD127) results in severe immunodeficiencies in mice and humans. To more precisely identify signals governing IL-7 function in vivo, we have disrupted the IL-7Rα Y449XXM motif in mice by knock-in mutagenesis (IL-7Rα449F). Thymic precursors were reduced in number in IL-7Rα449F mice, but in marked contrast to IL-7Rα−/− knockout mice, thymocytes and peripheral T cells developed normally. Strikingly, Listeria infection revealed that CD4 and CD8 T cells had different requirements for IL-7Rα signals. CD4 T cells failed to mount a primary response, but despite normal CD8 primary responses, maintenance of CD8 memory was impaired in IL-7Rα449F mice. Furthermore, we show that Bcl-2 is IL-7Rα Y449 independent and insufficient for IL-7–mediated maintenance of CD8 memory.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

IL-2-activated CD8+CD44high cells express both adaptive and innate immune system receptors and demonstrate specificity for syngeneic tumor cells

Salim Dhanji; Hung-Sia Teh

CD8+ T cells depend on the αβ TCR for Ag recognition and function. However, Ag-activated CD8+ T cells can also express receptors of the innate immune system. In this study, we examined the expression of NK receptors on a population of CD8+ T cells expressing high levels of CD44 (CD8+CD44high cells) from normal mice. These cells are distinct from conventional memory CD8+ T cells and they proliferate and become activated in response to IL 2 via a CD48/CD2-dependent mechanism. Before activation, they express low or undetectable levels of NK receptors but upon activation with IL-2 they expressed significant levels of activating NK receptors including 2B4 and NKG2D. Interestingly, the IL-2-activated cells demonstrate a preference in the killing of syngeneic tumor cells. This killing of syngeneic tumor cells was greatly enhanced by the expression of the NKG2D ligand Rae-1 on the target cell. In contrast to conventional CD8+ T cells, IL-2-activated CD8+CD44high cells express DAP12, an adaptor molecule that is normally expressed in activated NK cells. These observations indicate that activated CD8+CD44high cells express receptors of both the adaptive and innate immune system and may play a unique role in the surveillance of host cells that have been altered by infection or transformation.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

TNF Receptor 2-Deficient CD8 T Cells Are Resistant to Fas/Fas Ligand-Induced Cell Death

Hung-Sia Teh; Andrew Seebaran; Soo-Jeet Teh

Apoptotic cell death plays a fundamental role in the maintenance of tissue homeostasis in complex biological systems. It is also a major mechanism for keeping immune reactions in check. Members of the TNF family of receptors and cytokines are implicated in the regulation of apoptotic signals that shape the immune system. In this study, we have examined the role of three members of the TNFR family, Fas (CD95), TNFR1 (p55), and TNFR2 (p75), in inducing cell death in Con A-activated CD4 and CD8 T cells. It was found that Con A-activated p55−/− CD4 or CD8 T cells were highly resistant to TNF-induced cell death. By contrast, although activated p75−/− CD4 or CD8 T cells were killed by TNF, they were more resistant to TNF-induced killing when compared with p75+/+ cells, particularly at higher concentrations of TNF. We also determined whether activated p55−/− and p75−/− T cells differ in their sensitivity to cell death induced by TCR cross-linking. We found that activated p55−/− CD4 or CD8 T cells were equally susceptible to TCR-induced cell death. More interestingly, the loss of the p75 receptor conferred resistance to TCR-induced death in activated CD8, but not CD4 T cells. This resistance to TCR-induced death in activated p75−/− CD8 T cells correlated with the resistance of these cells to Fas/Fas ligand-induced cell death.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

A Population of In Vivo Anergized T Cells with a Lower Activation Threshold for the Induction of CD25 Exhibit Differential Requirements in Mobilization of Intracellular Calcium and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Activation

Oliver Utting; Soo-Jeet Teh; Hung-Sia Teh

Chronic exposure of mature T cells with specificity for self-Ags can lead to the induction of a nonfunctional state which is referred to as T cell anergy. It is unclear whether anergic T cells are destined for cell death and thereby harmless or whether they can contribute to the induction of autoimmunity and/or regulation of anti-self reactivity. We have begun to address this issue. In a recent study, we showed that a population of mature CD4−CD8− T cells that express a transgenic TCR specific for the Ld MHC class I molecule are rendered anergic in Ld-expressing mice. In this study, we show that this population of anergic T cells possess a lower activation threshold for the induction of CD25 and CD69 in response to stimulation by antigenic ligands. Furthermore, these anergic T cells undergo extensive proliferation when stimulated with a low-affinity ligand in the presence of an exogenous source of IL-2. Biochemical analysis of the early intracellular signaling events of these in vivo anergized T cells showed that they have a signaling defect at the level of ZAP-70 and linker for the activation of T cell (LAT) phosphorylation. They also exhibit a defect in mobilization of intracellular calcium in response to TCR signaling. However, these anergic T cells demonstrate no defect in SLP-76 phosphorylation and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 activation. These biochemical characteristics of the anergic T cells were associated with an elevated level of Fyn, but not Lck expression. The potential contributions of these anergic T cells in the induction and/or regulation of autoimmune responses are discussed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Hung-Sia Teh's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Soo-Jeet Teh

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John J. Priatel

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Salim Dhanji

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard G. Miller

Ontario Institute for Cancer Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edward Y. Kim

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ninan Abraham

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oliver Utting

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge