Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1964127 Cellular Signalling 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

There are two major genes encoding the catalytic subunits of protein kinase A, Cα and Cβ. The functional significance of these isoforms is enigmatic. Lymphoid cells of the immune system express both Cα and Cβ. In this study we tested the role of Cα and Cβ in regulating immune cell reactivity to antigens using mice carrying a targeted disruption of the Cα and Cβ gene respectively. Cα and Cβ ablation both resulted in a 50% reduction in PKA-specific kinase activity and the level of PKA type I but not PKA type II. Moreover, despite that C subunit ablation did not affect immune cell development and homeostasis, Cα but not Cβ ablation augmented expression of the activation marker CD69 on lymphocytes. CD69 induction coincided with immune cell hyperresponsiveness and was associated with reduced sensitivity to cAMP-mediated inhibition of anti-CD3 induced T cell proliferation. Our results imply that Cα is required for normal immune cell reactivity and demonstrates isoform-specific effects and non-redundant functions of C subunit isoforms expressed in the same cell.

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