Author:
Afzal Samia,Hao Zhenyue,Itsumi Momoe,Abouelkheer Yasser,Brenner Dirk,Gao Yunfei,Wakeham Andrew,Hong Claire,Li Wanda Y.,Sylvester Jennifer,Gilani Syed O.,Brüstle Anne,Haight Jillian,You-Ten Annick J.,Lin Gloria H. Y.,Inoue Satoshi,Mak Tak W.
Abstract
UV radiation resistance-associated gene (UVRAG) encodes a tumor suppressor with putative roles in autophagy, endocytic trafficking, and DNA damage repair but its in vivo role in T cells is unknown. Because conditional homozygous deletion of Uvrag in mice results in early embryonic lethality, we generated T-cell–specific UVRAG-deficient mice that lacked UVRAG expression specifically in T cells. This loss of UVRAG led to defects in peripheral homeostasis that could not be explained by the increased sensitivity to cell death and impaired proliferation observed for other autophagy-related gene knockout mice. Instead, UVRAG-deficient T-cells exhibited normal mitochondrial clearance and activation-induced autophagy, suggesting that UVRAG has an autophagy-independent role that is critical for peripheral naive T-cell homeostatic proliferation. In vivo, T-cell–specific loss of UVRAG dampened CD8+ T-cell responses to LCMV infection in mice, delayed viral clearance, and impaired memory T-cell generation. Our data provide novel insights into the control of autophagy in T cells and identify UVRAG as a new regulator of naïve peripheral T-cell homeostasis.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
20 articles.
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