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  • Title: Disruption of diacylglycerol metabolism impairs the induction of T cell anergy.
    Author: Olenchock BA, Guo R, Carpenter JH, Jordan M, Topham MK, Koretzky GA, Zhong XP.
    Journal: Nat Immunol; 2006 Nov; 7(11):1174-81. PubMed ID: 17028587.
    Abstract:
    Anergic T cells have altered diacylglycerol metabolism, but whether that altered metabolism has a causative function in the induction of T cell anergy is not apparent. To test the importance of diacylglycerol metabolism in T cell anergy, we manipulated diacylglycerol kinases (DGKs), which are enzymes that terminate diacylglycerol-dependent signaling. Overexpression of DGK-alpha resulted in a defect in T cell receptor signaling that is characteristic of anergy. We generated DGK-alpha-deficient mice and found that DGK-alpha-deficient T cells had more diacylglycerol-dependent T cell receptor signaling. In vivo anergy induction was impaired in DGK-alpha-deficient mice. When stimulated in anergy-producing conditions, T cells lacking DGK-alpha or DGK-zeta proliferated and produced interleukin 2. Pharmacological inhibition of DGK-alpha activity in DGK-zeta-deficient T cells that received an anergizing stimulus proliferated similarly to wild-type T cells that received CD28 costimulation and prevented anergy induction. Our findings suggest that regulation of diacylglycerol metabolism is critical in determining whether activation or anergy ensues after T cell receptor stimulation.
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