4.5 Article

MUC1 mucin is expressed on human T-regulatory cells: Function in both co-stimulation and co-inhibition

Journal

CELLULAR IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 272, Issue 2, Pages 193-199

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.cellimm.2011.10.012

Keywords

T cells; Regulatory T cells; MUC1 mucin

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  3. Alberta Innovates for Health Solutions

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MUD mucin, an important protein of epithelial cells and epithelial-derived carcinomas, is also expressed on activated T cells, showing both positive and negative regulatory functions. It is currently unknown whether MUC1 is a true regulatory protein of T cells and what conditions lead to MUC1 co-stimulation versus co-inhibition. We have found that MUD is expressed on the majority of T-regulatory cells (CD4(+)/CD25(+)/FoxP3(+)) in humans (>90%) and that CD3/MUC1 co-stimulation leads to an increased number of T-regulatory cells. We also discovered that the immunoregulatory function is dependent upon the number of accessory (CD3(-)) cells present, with co-inhibition occurring with <5-10% accessory cells while co-stimulation begins with a reconstitution of similar to 50% accessory cells. Co-inhibition was also found to not be the result of the apoptosis but a separate and unknown pathway. This data further characterizes MUC1 as an immunoregulatory protein of T cells capable of giving a positive or negative stimulus. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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