Activation of Wnt signaling arrests effector differentiation in human peripheral and cord blood-derived T lymphocytes

S Muralidharan, PJ Hanley, E Liu… - The Journal of …, 2011 - journals.aai.org
The Journal of Immunology, 2011journals.aai.org
The canonical Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway plays an important role in thymocyte
development and T cell migration, but little is known about its role in naive-to-effector
differentiation in human peripheral T cells. We show that activation of Wnt/β-catenin
signaling arrests human peripheral blood and cord blood T lymphocytes in the naive stage
and blocks their transition into functional T effector cells. Wnt signaling was induced in
polyclonally activated human T cells by treatment either with the glycogen synthase kinase …
Abstract
The canonical Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway plays an important role in thymocyte development and T cell migration, but little is known about its role in naive-to-effector differentiation in human peripheral T cells. We show that activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling arrests human peripheral blood and cord blood T lymphocytes in the naive stage and blocks their transition into functional T effector cells. Wnt signaling was induced in polyclonally activated human T cells by treatment either with the glycogen synthase kinase 3β inhibitor TWS119 or the physiological Wnt agonist Wnt-3a, and these T cells preserved a naive CD45RA+ CD62L+ phenotype compared with control-activated T cells that progressed to a CD45RO+ CD62L− effector phenotype, and this occurred in a TWS119 dose-dependent manner. TWS119-induced Wnt signaling reduced T cell expansion, as a result of a block in cell division, and impaired acquisition of T cell effector function, measured by degranulation and IFN-γ production in response to T cell activation. The block in T cell division may be attributed to the reduced IL-2Rα expression in TWS119-treated T cells that lowers their capacity to use autocrine IL-2 for expansion. Collectively, our data suggest that Wnt/β-catenin signaling is a negative regulator of naive-to-effector T cell differentiation in human T lymphocytes. The arrest in T cell differentiation induced by Wnt signaling might have relevant clinical applications such as to preserve the naive T cell compartment in Ag-specific T cells generated ex vivo for adoptive T cell immunotherapy.
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