Expression of T cell receptor β locus in central nervous system neurons

被引:63
作者
Syken, J [1 ]
Shatz, CJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurobiol, Boston, MA 02115 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1735415100
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
MHC class I proteins are cell-surface ligands that bind to T cell receptors and other immunoreceptors and act to regulate the activation state of immune cells. Recent work has shown that MHC class I genes and CD3zeta, an obligate component of T cell receptors, are expressed in neurons, are regulated by neuronal activity, and function in neuronal development and plasticity. A search for additional neuronally expressed T cell receptor components has revealed that the T cell antigen receptor 13 (TCRbeta) locus is expressed in neurons of the murine central nervous system and that this expression is dynamically regulated over development. In neonates, expression is most abundant in various thalamic nuclei. At later ages and in adults, thalamic expression fades and cortical expression is robust, particularly in layer 6. In T cells, protein-encoding transcripts are produced only after recombination of the TCRbeta genomic locus, which joins variable, diversity, and joining regions, a process that creates much of the diversity of the immune system. We detect no genomic recombination in neurons. Rather, transcripts begin in regions upstream of several joining regions, and are spliced to constant region segments. One of the transcripts encodes a hypothetical 207-aa, 23-kDa protein, which includes the TCRbeta J2.7 region, and the entire C region. These observations suggest that TCRbeta may function in neurons.
引用
收藏
页码:13048 / 13053
页数:6
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [1] ON SOMATIC RECOMBINATION IN THE CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEM OF TRANSGENIC MICE
    ABELIOVICH, A
    GERBER, D
    TANAKA, O
    KATSUKI, M
    GRAYBIEL, AM
    TONEGAWA, S
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1992, 257 (5068) : 404 - 408
  • [2] Transposition mediated by RAG1 and RAG2 and its implications for the evolution of the immune system
    Agrawal, A
    Eastman, QM
    Schatz, DG
    [J]. NATURE, 1998, 394 (6695) : 744 - 751
  • [3] Divergent and convergent evolution of NK-cell receptors
    Barten, R
    Torkar, M
    Haude, A
    Trowsdale, J
    Wilson, MJ
    [J]. TRENDS IN IMMUNOLOGY, 2001, 22 (01) : 52 - 57
  • [4] The mechanism and regulation of chromosomal V(D)J recombination
    Bassing, CH
    Swat, W
    Alt, FW
    [J]. CELL, 2002, 109 : S45 - S55
  • [5] PRE-GOLGI DEGRADATION OF NEWLY SYNTHESIZED T-CELL ANTIGEN RECEPTOR CHAINS - INTRINSIC SENSITIVITY AND THE ROLE OF SUBUNIT ASSEMBLY
    BONIFACINO, JS
    SUZUKI, CK
    LIPPINCOTTSCHWARTZ, J
    WEISSMAN, AM
    KLAUSNER, RD
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1989, 109 (01) : 73 - 83
  • [6] X-chromosome inactivation:: closing in on proteins that bind XistRNA
    Brockdorff, N
    [J]. TRENDS IN GENETICS, 2002, 18 (07) : 352 - 358
  • [7] Identification of diversified genes that contain immunoglobulin-like variable regions in a protochordate
    Cannon, JP
    Haire, RN
    Litman, GW
    [J]. NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2002, 3 (12) : 1200 - 1207
  • [8] THE RECOMBINATION ACTIVATING GENE-1 (RAG-1) TRANSCRIPT IS PRESENT IN THE MURINE CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEM
    CHUN, JJM
    SCHATZ, DG
    OETTINGER, MA
    JAENISCH, R
    BALTIMORE, D
    [J]. CELL, 1991, 64 (01) : 189 - 200
  • [9] IDENTIFICATION OF A DIVERSITY SEGMENT OF HUMAN T-CELL RECEPTOR BETA-CHAIN, AND COMPARISON WITH THE ANALOGOUS MURINE ELEMENT
    CLARK, SP
    YOSHIKAI, Y
    TAYLOR, S
    SIU, G
    HOOD, L
    MAK, TW
    [J]. NATURE, 1984, 311 (5984) : 387 - 389
  • [10] Regulation of class I MHC gene expression in the developing and mature CNS by neural activity
    Corriveau, RA
    Huh, GS
    Shatz, CJ
    [J]. NEURON, 1998, 21 (03) : 505 - 520