Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9881216 | Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Plasma levels of kininogens increase with age in both rats and humans. Kininogens are inhibitors of cysteine proteinases, and filarial cysteine proteinase inhibitors (cystatins) reduce the proliferation of T cells. We evaluated whether T-kininogen (T-KG) might mimic this effect, and here we present data indicating that exposure of either rat splenocytes or Jurkat cells to purified T-KG results in inhibition of both ERK activation and [3H]-thymidine incorporation, both basal and in response to ConA or PHA. Interestingly, T-KG did not impair [3H]-thymidine incorporation in response to IL-2, which requires primarily the activation of the JNK and Jak/STAT pathways. These effects were neither the consequence of increased cell death, nor required the activity of kinin receptors. Furthermore, when T cell receptor proximal events were bypassed by the use of PMA plus Calcium ionophore, T-KG no longer inhibited ERK activation, suggesting that inhibition occurs upstream of these events, possibly at the level of membrane associated signal transduction molecules. We conclude that, like filarial cystatins, T-KG inhibits ERK-dependent T cell proliferation, and these observations suggest a possible role for T-KG in immunosenescence.
Keywords
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Ageing
Authors
Claudio Acuña-Castillo, Mauricio Aravena, ElÃas Leiva-Salcedo, Viviana Pérez, Christian Gómez, Valeria Sabaj, Sumiyo Nishimura, Claudio Pérez, Alicia Colombo, Robin Walter, Felipe Sierra,