Receptor for advanced glycation end products expression on T cells contributes to antigen-specific cellular expansion in vivo

B Moser, DD Desai, MP Downie, Y Chen… - The Journal of …, 2007 - journals.aai.org
B Moser, DD Desai, MP Downie, Y Chen, SF Yan, K Herold, AM Schmidt, R Clynes
The Journal of Immunology, 2007journals.aai.org
Receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is an activation receptor triggered by
inflammatory S100/calgranulins and high mobility group box-1 ligands. We have
investigated the importance of RAGE on Ag priming of T cells in murine models in vivo.
RAGE is inducibly up-regulated during T cell activation. Transfer of RAGE-deficient OT II T
cells into OVA-immunized hosts resulted in reduced proliferative responses that were further
diminished in RAGE-deficient recipients. Examination of RAGE-deficient dendritic cells did …
Abstract
Receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is an activation receptor triggered by inflammatory S100/calgranulins and high mobility group box-1 ligands. We have investigated the importance of RAGE on Ag priming of T cells in murine models in vivo. RAGE is inducibly up-regulated during T cell activation. Transfer of RAGE-deficient OT II T cells into OVA-immunized hosts resulted in reduced proliferative responses that were further diminished in RAGE-deficient recipients. Examination of RAGE-deficient dendritic cells did not reveal functional impairment in Ag presentation, maturation, or migratory capacities. However, RAGE-deficient T cells showed markedly impaired proliferative responses in vitro to nominal and alloantigens, in parallel with decreased production of IFN-γ and IL-2. These data indicate that RAGE expressed on T cells is required for efficient priming of T cells and elucidate critical roles for RAGE engagement during cognate dendritic cell-T cell interactions.
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