4.4 Article

Differential Expression and Function of α-Mannosidase I in Stimulated Naive and Memory CD4+ T Cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 34, Issue 5, Pages 428-437

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CJI.0b013e31821dcf23

Keywords

alpha-mannosidase I; N-linked glycosylation; CD4(+) T cells; naive; memory

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N-linked protein glycosylation represents an important cellular process for modifying protein properties. It resembles a cascade of various enzymatic reactions, in which class I alpha-mannosidases play a central role. We and others have recently shown that N-glycosylation plays a major role for immune functions. We now analyzed the expression and function of alpha-mannosidase I in CD4(+) naive and memory T cells studying human and murine T cells. Alpha-mannosidase I function was altered by (i) treatment with Kifunensine, a specific inhibitor class I alpha-mannosidases, (ii) synthetic inhibitory RNA, and (iii) overexpression by retroviral gene transfer. T-cell activation was evaluated by CD69 expression, cytokine production and proliferation. Our results demonstrate (i) that alpha-mannosidase I transcription is transiently downregulated after T-cell activation with either polyclonal anti-CD3/CD28 antibodies or allogeneic CD19(+) B cells, and (ii) that alpha-mannosidase I exerts an inhibitory effect on T-cell activation. It is interesting to note that the inhibitory effect was restricted to naive CD4(+) T cells in both systems, human T cells and murine transgenic CD4(+) OT-II cells, whereas human memory T cells and primed CD4(+) OT-II cells remained unaffected. Alpha-mannosidase I inhibition reduced the activation threshold for naive but not already primed CD4(+) OT-II cells as the cells were able to respond to lower ovalbumin peptide concentrations and increased the rejection potential of alloreactive T cells in vivo. Thus, complex N-glycans generated by enzymes such as alpha-mannosidase I inhibit the activation of naive T cells. These findings could be used to improve the ex vivo priming of naive T cells for adaptive T-cell therapies.

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