Affiliation:
1. Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa, Iowa City; Department of Pediatrics, Children's Mercy Hospital, University of Missouri-KC, School of Medicine, Kansas City; Department of Pediatrics, the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, and the Molecular Biology Institute and Department of Physiology, University of California, Los Angeles.
Abstract
Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ), a lysosomotropic amine, is an immunosuppressive agent presently being evaluated in bone marrow transplant patients to treat graft-versus-host disease. While its immunosuppressive properties have been attributed primarily to its ability to interfere with antigen processing, recent reports demonstrate HCQ also blocks T-cell activation in vitro. To more precisely define the T-cell inhibitory effects of HCQ, the authors evaluated T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) signaling events in a T-cell line pretreated with HCQ. In a concentration-dependent manner, HCQ inhibited anti-TCR–induced up-regulation of CD69 expression, a distal TCR signaling event. Proximal TCR signals, including inductive protein tyrosine phosphorylation, tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase C γ1, and total inositol phosphate production, were unaffected by HCQ. Strikingly, anti-TCR-crosslinking–induced calcium mobilization was significantly inhibited by HCQ, particularly at the highest concentrations tested (100 μmol/L) in both T-cell lines and primary T cells. HCQ, in a dose-dependent fashion, also reduced a B-cell antigen receptor calcium signal, indicating this effect may be a general property of HCQ. Inhibition of the calcium signal correlated directly with a reduction in the size of thapsigargin-sensitive intracellular calcium stores in HCQ-treated cells. Together, these findings suggest that disruption of TCR-crosslinking–dependent calcium signaling provides an additional mechanism to explain the immunomodulatory properties of HCQ.
Publisher
American Society of Hematology
Subject
Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry
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