The human T cell antigen gp39, a member of the TNF gene family, is a ligand for the CD40 receptor: expression of a soluble form of gp39 with B cell co-stimulatory activity

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_82FF54EB5531
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
The human T cell antigen gp39, a member of the TNF gene family, is a ligand for the CD40 receptor: expression of a soluble form of gp39 with B cell co-stimulatory activity
Journal
EMBO Journal
Author(s)
Hollenbaugh  D., Grosmaire  L. S., Kullas  C. D., Chalupny  N. J., Braesch-Andersen  S., Noelle  R. J., Stamenkovic  I., Ledbetter  J. A., Aruffo  A.
ISSN
0261-4189 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
1992
Volume
11
Number
12
Pages
4313-4321
Notes
PT - Journal Article PT - Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't PT - Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S
Abstract
Signals delivered to B cells via CD40 can synergize with those provided by other B cell surface receptors to induce B cell proliferation and antibody class switching as well as modulate cytokine production and cell adhesion. Recently, it has been shown that the ligand for CD40 is a cell surface protein of approximately 39 kDa expressed by activated T cells, gp39. Here we report on the isolation and characterization of a cDNA clone encoding human gp39, a type II membrane protein with homology to TNF, and the construction and characterization of a soluble recombinant form of gp39. COS cell transfectants expressing gp39 synergized with either anti-CD20 mAb or PMA to drive strong B cell proliferation and alone were able to drive B cells to proliferate weakly. In all cases the B cell proliferation induced by gp39-expressing COS cells was reduced to background levels by the addition of soluble CD40. Unlike gp39-expressing COS cells, recombinant soluble gp39 was not mitogenic alone and required co-stimulation to drive B cell proliferation. These results suggest that B cells require a second signal besides gp39-CD40 to drive proliferation and that soluble gp39 alone in a non-membrane bound form is able to provide co-stimulatory signals to B cells
Keywords
Amino Acid Sequence/Antigens,CD/metabolism/Antigens,CD40/Antigens,Differentiation,B-Lymphocyte/B-Lymphocytes/cytology/immunology/Base Sequence/CD40 Ligand/Cell Division/Cell Line/Cells,Cultured/Dna/Humans/Membrane Proteins/genetics/Molecular Sequence Data/Multigene Family/Recombinant Fusion Proteins/Sequence Homology,Amino Acid/T-Lymphocytes/Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha/Research
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
29/01/2008 19:34
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:42
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