RGS3 controls T lymphocyte migration in a model of Th2-mediated airway inflammation

Author:

Williams Jesse W.1,Yau Douglas1,Sethakorn Nan1,Kach Jacob1,Reed Eleanor B.1,Moore Tamson V.1,Cannon Judy1,Jin Xiaohua2,Xing Heming2,Muslin Anthony J.2,Sperling Anne I.1,Dulin Nickolai O.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Section on Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois; and

2. Washington University School of Medicine, Center for Cardiovascular Research, St. Louis, Missouri

Abstract

T cell migration toward sites of antigen exposure is mediated by G protein signaling and is a key function in the development of immune responses. Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins modulate G protein signaling; however, their role in the regulation of adaptive immune responses has not been thoroughly explored. Herein we demonstrated abundant expression of the Gi/Gq-specific RGS3 in activated T cells, and that diminished RGS3 expression in a T cell thymoma increased cytokine-induced migration. To examine the role of endogenous RGS3 in vivo, mice deficient in the RGS domain (RGS3ΔRGS) were generated and tested in an experimental model of asthma. Compared with littermate controls, the inflammation in the RGS3ΔRGS mice was characterized by increased T cell numbers and the striking development of perivascular lymphoid structures. Surprisingly, while innate inflammatory cells were also increased in the lungs of RGS3ΔRGS mice, eosinophil numbers and Th2 cytokine production were equivalent to control mice. In contrast, T cell numbers in the draining lymph nodes (dLN) were reduced in the RGS3ΔRGS, demonstrating a redistribution of T cells from the dLN to the lungs via increased RGS3ΔRGS T cell migration. Together these novel findings show a nonredundant role for endogenous RGS3 in controlling T cell migration in vitro and in an in vivo model of inflammation.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Cell Biology,Physiology (medical),Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Physiology

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