Terry I. Guinter
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Terry I. Guinter.
Nature Immunology | 2010
Jung-Hyun Park; Stanley Adoro; Terry I. Guinter; Batu Erman; Amala Alag; Marta Catalfamo; Motoko Kimura; Yongzhi Cui; Philip J. Lucas; Ronald E. Gress; Masato Kubo; Lothar Hennighausen; Lionel Feigenbaum; Alfred Singer
Immature CD4+CD8+ (double-positive (DP)) thymocytes are signaled via T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) to undergo positive selection and become responsive to intrathymic cytokines such as interleukin 7 (IL-7). We report here that cytokine signaling is required for positively selected thymocytes to express the transcription factor Runx3, specify CD8 lineage choice and differentiate into cytotoxic-lineage T cells. In DP thymocytes genetically engineered to be cytokine responsive, IL-7 signaling induced TCR-unsignaled DP thymocytes to express Runx3 and to differentiate into mature CD8+ T cells, completely circumventing positive selection. We conclude that TCR-mediated positive selection converts DP cells into cytokine-responsive thymocytes, but it is subsequent signaling by intrathymic cytokines that specifies CD8 lineage choice and promotes differentiation into cytotoxic-lineage T cells.
Blood | 2012
Xuguang Tai; François Van Laethem; Leonid A. Pobezinsky; Terry I. Guinter; Susan O. Sharrow; Anthony Adams; Larry Granger; Michael J. Kruhlak; Tullia Lindsten; Craig B. Thompson; Lionel Feigenbaum; Alfred Singer
CTLA-4 proteins contribute to the suppressor function of regulatory T cells (Tregs), but the mechanism by which they do so remains incompletely understood. In the present study, we assessed CTLA-4 protein function in both Tregs and conventional (Tconv) CD4(+) T cells. We report that CTLA-4 proteins are responsible for all 3 characteristic Treg functions of suppression, TCR hyposignaling, and anergy. However, Treg suppression and anergy only required the external domain of CTLA-4, whereas TCR hyposignaling required its internal domain. Surprisingly, TCR hyposignaling was neither required for Treg suppression nor anergy because costimulatory blockade by the external domain of CTLA-4 was sufficient for both functions. We also report that CTLA-4 proteins were localized in Tregs in submembrane vesicles that rapidly recycled to/from the cell surface, whereas CTLA-4 proteins in naive Tconv cells were retained in Golgi vesicles away from the cell membrane and had no effect on Tconv cell function. However, TCR signaling of Tconv cells released CTLA-4 proteins from Golgi retention and caused activated Tconv cells to acquire suppressor function. Therefore, the results of this study demonstrate the importance of intracellular localization for CTLA-4 protein function and reveal that CTLA-4 protein externalization imparts suppressor function to both regulatory and conventional CD4(+) T cells.
Immunity | 2000
Rémy Bosselut; Shuichi Kubo; Terry I. Guinter; Jeffrey L. Kopacz; John D. Altman; Lionel Feigenbaum; Alfred Singer
Abstract The contribution of the CD8β subunit to CD8 coreceptor function is poorly understood. We now demonstrate that the CD8β extracellular domain increases the avidity of CD8 binding to MHC I, and that the intracellular domain of CD8β enhances association with two intracellular molecules required for TCR signal transduction, Lck and LAT. By assessing CD8 + T cell differentiation in CD8β-deficient mice reconstituted with various transgenic CD8β chimeric molecules, we also demonstrate that the intracellular and extracellular domains of CD8β can contribute independently to CD8 + T cell development, but that both CD8β domains together are most efficient. Thus, this study identifies the molecular functions of the CD8β intracellular and extracellular domains and documents their contributions to CD8 + T cell development.
Immunity | 2013
Xuguang Tai; Batu Erman; Amala Alag; Jie Mu; Motoko Kimura; Gil Katz; Terry I. Guinter; Tom McCaughtry; Ruth Etzensperger; Lionel Feigenbaum; Dinah S. Singer; Alfred Singer
Immune tolerance requires regulatory T (Treg) cells to prevent autoimmune disease, with the transcription factor Foxp3 functioning as the critical regulator of Treg cell development and function. We report here that Foxp3 was lethal to developing Treg cells in the thymus because it induced a unique proapoptotic protein signature (Puma⁺⁺⁺p-Bim⁺⁺p-JNK⁺⁺DUSP6⁻) and repressed expression of prosurvival Bcl-2 molecules. However, Foxp3 lethality was prevented by common gamma chain (γc)-dependent cytokine signals that were present in the thymus in limiting amounts sufficient to support only ∼1 million Treg cells. Consequently, most newly arising Treg cells in the thymus were deprived of this signal and underwent Foxp3-induced death, with Foxp3⁺CD25⁻ Treg precursor cells being the most susceptible. Thus, we identify Foxp3 as a proapoptotic protein that requires developing Treg cells to compete with one another for limiting amounts of γc-dependent survival signals in the thymus.
Immunity | 2012
Anastasia N. Tikhonova; François Van Laethem; Ken-ichi Hanada; Jinghua Lu; Leonid A. Pobezinsky; Changwan Hong; Terry I. Guinter; Susanna Jeurling; Günter Bernhardt; Jung-Hyun Park; James Chih-Hsin Yang; Peter D. Sun; Alfred Singer
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) restriction is the cardinal feature of T cell antigen recognition and is thought to be intrinsic to αβ T cell receptor (TCR) structure because of germline-encoded residues that impose MHC specificity. Here, we analyzed αβTCRs from T cells that had not undergone MHC-specific thymic selection. Instead of recognizing peptide-MHC complexes, the two αβTCRs studied here resembled antibodies in recognizing glycosylation-dependent conformational epitopes on a native self-protein, CD155, and they did so with high affinity independently of MHC molecules. Ligand recognition was via the αβTCR combining site and involved the identical germline-encoded residues that have been thought to uniquely impose MHC specificity, demonstrating that these residues do not only promote MHC binding. This study demonstrates that, without MHC-specific thymic selection, αβTCRs can resemble antibodies in recognizing conformational epitopes on MHC-independent ligands.
Nature Immunology | 2013
Motoko Kimura; Leonid A. Pobezinsky; Terry I. Guinter; Julien Thomas; Anthony Adams; Jung-Hyun Park; Xuguang Tai; Alfred Singer
The maintenance of naive CD8+ T cells is necessary for lifelong immunocompetence but for unknown reasons requires signaling via both interleukin 7 (IL-7) and the T cell antigen receptor (TCR). We now report that naive CD8+ T cells required IL-7 signaling to be intermittent, not continuous, because prolonged IL-7 signaling induced naive CD8+ T cells to proliferate, produce interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and undergo IFN-γ-triggered cell death. Homeostatic engagement of the TCR interrupted IL-7 signaling and thereby supported the survival and quiescence of CD8+ T cells. However, CD8+ T cells with insufficient TCR affinity for self ligands received prolonged IL-7 signaling and died during homeostasis. In this study we identified regulation of the duration of IL-7 signaling by homeostatic engagement of the TCR as the basis for in vivo CD8+ T cell homeostasis.
Nature Immunology | 2015
Leonid A. Pobezinsky; Ruth Etzensperger; Susanna Jeurling; Amala Alag; Tejas Kadakia; Tom McCaughtry; Motoko Kimura; Susan O. Sharrow; Terry I. Guinter; Lionel Feigenbaum; Alfred Singer
Lethal-7 (let-7) microRNAs (miRNAs) are the most abundant miRNAs in the genome, but their role in developing thymocytes is unclear. We found that let-7 miRNAs targeted Zbtb16 mRNA, which encodes the lineage-specific transcription factor PLZF, to post-transcriptionally regulate PLZF expression and thereby the effector functions of natural killer T cells (NKT cells). Dynamic upregulation of let-7 miRNAs during the development of NKT thymocytes downregulated PLZF expression and directed their terminal differentiation into interferon-γ (IFN-γ)-producing NKT1 cells. Without upregulation of let-7 miRNAs, NKT thymocytes maintained high PLZF expression and terminally differentiated into interleukin 4 (IL-4)-producing NKT2 cells or IL-17-producing NKT17 cells. Upregulation of let-7 miRNAs in developing NKT thymocytes was signaled by IL-15, vitamin D and retinoic acid. Such targeting of a lineage-specific transcription factor by miRNA represents a previously unknown level of developmental regulation in the thymus.
Cell | 2013
François Van Laethem; Anastasia N. Tikhonova; Leonid A. Pobezinsky; Xuguang Tai; Motoko Kimura; Cecile Le Saout; Terry I. Guinter; Anthony Adams; Susan O. Sharrow; Günter Bernhardt; Lionel Feigenbaum; Alfred Singer
Thymic selection requires signaling by the protein tyrosine kinase Lck to generate T cells expressing αβ T cell antigen receptors (TCR). For reasons not understood, the thymus selects only αβTCR that are restricted by major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-encoded determinants. Here, we report that Lck proteins that were coreceptor associated promoted thymic selection of conventionally MHC-restricted TCR, but Lck proteins that were coreceptor free promoted thymic selection of MHC-independent TCR. Transgenic TCR with MHC-independent specificity for CD155 utilized coreceptor-free Lck to signal thymic selection in the absence of MHC, unlike any transgenic TCR previously described. Thus, the thymus can select either MHC-restricted or MHC-independent αβTCR depending on whether Lck is coreceptor associated or coreceptor free. We conclude that the intracellular state of Lck determines the specificity of thymic selection and that Lck association with coreceptor proteins during thymic selection is the mechanism by which MHC restriction is imposed on a randomly generated αβTCR repertoire.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003
Rémy Bosselut; Terry I. Guinter; Susan O. Sharrow; Alfred Singer
The mechanism by which T cell receptor specificity determines the outcome of the CD4/CD8 lineage decision in the thymus is not known. An important clue is the fact that major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-I–signaled thymocytes paradoxically appear as CD4+8lo transitional cells during their differentiation into CD8+ T cells. Lineage commitment is generally thought to occur at the CD4+8+ (double positive) stage of differentiation and to result in silencing of the opposite coreceptor gene. From this perspective, the appearance of MHC-I–signaled thymocytes as CD4+8lo cells would be due to effects on CD8 surface protein expression, not CD8 gene expression. But contrary to this perspective, this study demonstrates that MHC-I–signaled thymocytes appear as CD4+8lo cells because of transient down-regulation of CD8 gene expression, not because of changes in CD8 surface protein expression or distribution. This study also demonstrates that initial cessation of CD8 gene expression in MHC-I–signaled thymocytes is not necessarily indicative of commitment to the CD4+ T cell lineage, as such thymocytes retain the potential to differentiate into CD8+ T cells. These results challenge classical concepts of lineage commitment but fulfill predictions of the kinetic signaling model.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012
Anne Gegonne; Xuguang Tai; Jinghui Zhang; Gang Wu; Jianjian Zhu; Aki Yoshimoto; Jeffrey Hanson; Constance Cultraro; Qing Rong Chen; Terry I. Guinter; Zhihui Yang; Karen S. Hathcock; Alfred Singer; Jaime Rodriguez-Canales; Lino Tessarollo; Susan Mackem; Daoud Meerzaman; Kenneth H. Buetow; Dinah S. Singer
ABSTRACT TAF7, a component of the TFIID complex that nucleates the assembly of transcription preinitiation complexes, also independently interacts with and regulates the enzymatic activities of other transcription factors, including P-TEFb, TFIIH, and CIITA, ensuring an orderly progression in transcription initiation. Since not all TAFs are required in terminally differentiated cells, we examined the essentiality of TAF7 in cells at different developmental stages in vivo. Germ line disruption of the TAF7 gene is embryonic lethal between 3.5 and 5.5 days postcoitus. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts with TAF7 deleted cease transcription globally and stop proliferating. In contrast, whereas TAF7 is essential for the differentiation and proliferation of immature thymocytes, it is not required for subsequent, proliferation-independent differentiation of lineage committed thymocytes or for their egress into the periphery. TAF7 deletion in peripheral CD4 T cells affects only a small number of transcripts. However, T cells with TAF7 deleted are not able to undergo activation and expansion in response to antigenic stimuli. These findings suggest that TAF7 is essential for proliferation but not for proliferation-independent differentiation.