The Proteomic Landscape of Resting and Activated CD4+T Cells Reveal Insights into Cell Differentiation and Function

CD4+ T cells (T helper cells) are cytokine-producing adaptive immune cells that activate or regulate the responses of various immune cells. The activation and functional status of CD4+ T cells is important for adequate responses to pathogen infections but has also been associated with auto-immune di...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of molecular sciences 2020-12, Vol.22 (1), p.275, Article 275
Hauptverfasser: Subbannayya, Yashwanth, Haug, Markus, Pinto, Sneha M., Mohanty, Varshasnata, Meas, Hany Zakaria, Flo, Trude Helen, Prasad, T. S. Keshava, Kandasamy, Richard K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:CD4+ T cells (T helper cells) are cytokine-producing adaptive immune cells that activate or regulate the responses of various immune cells. The activation and functional status of CD4+ T cells is important for adequate responses to pathogen infections but has also been associated with auto-immune disorders and survival in several cancers. In the current study, we carried out a label-free high-resolution FTMS-based proteomic profiling of resting and T cell receptor-activated (72 h) primary human CD4+ T cells from peripheral blood of healthy donors as well as SUP-T1 cells. We identified 5237 proteins, of which significant alterations in the levels of 1119 proteins were observed between resting and activated CD4+ T cells. In addition to identifying several known T-cell activation-related processes altered expression of several stimulatory/inhibitory immune checkpoint markers between resting and activated CD4+ T cells were observed. Network analysis further revealed several known and novel regulatory hubs of CD4+ T cell activation, including IFNG, IRF1, FOXP3, AURKA, and RIOK2. Comparison of primary CD4+ T cell proteomic profiles with human lymphoblastic cell lines revealed a substantial overlap, while comparison with mouse CD+ T cell data suggested interspecies proteomic differences. The current dataset will serve as a valuable resource to the scientific community to compare and analyze the CD4+ proteome.
ISSN:1422-0067
1661-6596
1422-0067
DOI:10.3390/ijms22010275