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73


Novel Brief Cultural Psychiatry Training for Residents

Díaz, Esperanza; Armah, Tichianaa; Linse, Caroline T; Fiskin, Anna; Jordan, Ayana; Hafler, Janet
PMID: 25636254
ISSN: 1545-7230
CID: 4999922

Regulatory T cells suppress CD4+ T cells through NFAT-dependent transcriptional mechanisms

Shin, Daniel S; Jordan, Ayana; Basu, Samik; Thomas, Rajan M; Bandyopadhyay, Sanmay; de Zoeten, Edwin F; Wells, Andrew D; Macian, Fernando
Regulatory T cells (Tregs) control autoreactive T cells by inhibiting activation-induced proliferation and cytokine expression. The molecular mechanisms responsible for the inactivation of effector T cells by Tregs remain yet to be fully characterized. We report that T-helper cells stimulated in the presence of Tregs quickly activate NFAT1 and have increased NFAT1-dependent expression of the transcription repressor Ikaros. NFAT1 deficiency or dominant-negative Ikaros compromises Treg-mediated inhibition of T-helper cells in vitro and in vivo. Thus, our results place NFAT-dependent mechanisms as general regulators of T-cell tolerance and show that Treg-mediated suppression of T-helper cells results from the activation of NFAT-regulated gene expression.
PMCID:4198043
PMID: 25074018
ISSN: 1469-3178
CID: 4999912

Suppression of inflammatory responses during myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis is regulated by AKT3 signaling

Tsiperson, Vladislav; Gruber, Ross C; Goldberg, Michael F; Jordan, Ayana; Weinger, Jason G; Macian, Fernando; Shafit-Zagardo, Bridget
AKT3, a member of the serine/threonine kinase AKT family, is involved in a variety of biologic processes. AKT3 is expressed in immune cells and is the major AKT isoform in the CNS representing 30% of the total AKT expressed in spinal cord, and 50% in the brain. Myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) is a mouse model in which lymphocytes and monocytes enter the CNS, resulting in inflammation, demyelination, and axonal injury. We hypothesized that during EAE, deletion of AKT3 would negatively affect the CNS of AKT3(-/-) mice, making them more susceptible to CNS damage. During acute EAE, AKT3(-/-)mice were more severely affected than wild type (WT) mice. Evaluation of spinal cords showed that during acute and chronic disease, AKT3(-/-) spinal cords had more demyelination compared with WT spinal cords. Quantitative RT-PCR determined higher levels of IL-2, IL-17, and IFN-γ mRNA in spinal cords from AKT3(-/-) mice than WT. Experiments using bone marrow chimeras demonstrated that AKT3(-/-) mice receiving AKT3-deficient bone marrow cells had elevated clinical scores relative to control WT mice reconstituted with WT cells, indicating that altered function of both CNS cells and bone marrow-derived immune cells contributed to the phenotype. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed decreased numbers of Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells in the spinal cord of AKT3(-/-) mice compared with WT mice, whereas in vitro suppression assays showed that AKT3-deficient Th cells were less susceptible to regulatory T cell-mediated suppression than their WT counterparts. These results indicate that AKT3 signaling contributes to the protection of mice against EAE.
PMCID:3564598
PMID: 23335751
ISSN: 1550-6606
CID: 4999902