Artigo Revisado por pares

T-kininogen, a cystatin-like molecule, inhibits ERK-dependent lymphocyte proliferation

2005; Elsevier BV; Volume: 126; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.mad.2005.07.005

ISSN

1872-6216

Autores

Claudio Acuña‐Castillo, Mauricio Aravena, Elías Leiva‐Salcedo, Viviana Pérez, Christian R. Gómez, Valeria Sabaj, Sumiyo Nishimura, Carlos A. Perez, Alicia Colombo, Robin Walter, Felipe Sierra,

Tópico(s)

Adenosine and Purinergic Signaling

Resumo

Plasma levels of kininogens increase with age in both rats and humans. Kininogens are inhibitors of cysteine proteinases, and filarial cysteine proteinase inhibitors (cystatins) reduce the proliferation of T cells. We evaluated whether T-kininogen (T-KG) might mimic this effect, and here we present data indicating that exposure of either rat splenocytes or Jurkat cells to purified T-KG results in inhibition of both ERK activation and [3H]-thymidine incorporation, both basal and in response to ConA or PHA. Interestingly, T-KG did not impair [3H]-thymidine incorporation in response to IL-2, which requires primarily the activation of the JNK and Jak/STAT pathways. These effects were neither the consequence of increased cell death, nor required the activity of kinin receptors. Furthermore, when T cell receptor proximal events were bypassed by the use of PMA plus Calcium ionophore, T-KG no longer inhibited ERK activation, suggesting that inhibition occurs upstream of these events, possibly at the level of membrane associated signal transduction molecules. We conclude that, like filarial cystatins, T-KG inhibits ERK-dependent T cell proliferation, and these observations suggest a possible role for T-KG in immunosenescence.

Referência(s)