Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48651
Title: T lymphocyte signalling defects and immunodeficiency due to the lack of CD3γ
Authors: Arnaiz-Villena, A.
Timon, M.
Rodriguez-Gallego, C. 
Iglesias-Casarrubios, P.
Pacheco, A.
Regueiro, J. R.
UNESCO Clasification: 32 Ciencias médicas
310903 Inmunología
Keywords: CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes
CD8 Antigens
Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes
Issue Date: 1993
Journal: Immunodeficiency 
Abstract: A selective CD3 gamma defect, involving point mutations in both the paternal and the maternal genes, has been analyzed. The CD3 gamma defect affected two brothers of a four sibs family; one of them died at the age of 3 of a viral pneumonia with concomitant autoimmune features (Haemolytic anaemia and gut epithelial cell autoantibodies), whereas the other is still alive at the age of 10 with relatively mild infection episodes. In this work, the effects of the absence of the CD3 gamma chain in the structure and signal transduction of the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex and in the selection and function of T lymphocytes were studied. The absence of CD3 gamma did not prevent the expression of certain amounts of TCR/CD3 complexes on the surface of T lymphocytes. This suggests the existence of at least two TCR/CD3 isoforms in T cells, either with or without CD3 gamma. A persistent low proportion of CD8+ T cells, not functional in vitro (they were unable to proliferate) and probably in vivo (associated to a lethal viral pneumonia), was observed. In contrast, the proportion of CD4+ T cells was not altered, and they were functional both in vitro (they showed a normal proliferation and a low, but detectable, increase of cytosolic Ca2+ in response to anti-TCR/CD3 stimuli, although the production of IL-2 was impaired) and in vitro (they normally helped B cells). These results show that the absence of CD3 gamma affects the selection and function of cytotoxic, but apparently not helper, T lymphocytes, although the possibility that the CD4+ T cells represent a specific subpopulation can not be ruled out. They also suggest that the interactions of the TCR/CD3 complex with its co-receptors during thymic selection and antigen recognition in the periphery may be asymmetrical, with CD8 interacting through CD3 gamma and, probably, CD4 through the homologous CD3 delta.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48651
ISSN: 1067-795X
Source: Immunodeficiency[ISSN 1067-795X],v. 4, p. 121-129
Appears in Collections:Actas de congresos
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