dianas 7 (1) Arranz-Nicolás etal 2018 DGKα inactivation is an integral component of the costimulatory pathway that amplifies TCR signals

SECUAH 2018 > Arranz-Nicolás etal 2018

dianas | Vol 7 No 1 | marzo 2018 | e201803

DGKα inactivation is an integral component of the costimulatory pathway that amplifies TCR signals

Centro Nacional de Biotecnología (CNB-CSIC)

jarranz@cnb.csic.es

III Congreso de Señalización Celular, SECUAH 2018.
20-22 de marzo, 2018. Universidad de Alcalá. Alcalá de Henares, Madrid. España.
Sesión

Abstract

The arsenal of cancer therapies has evolved to target T lymphocytes and restore their capacity to destroy tumor cells. T cells rely on diacylglycerol (DAG) to carry out their functions. DAG availability and signaling are regulated by the enzymes diacylglycerol kinase (DGK) and , whose excess function drives T cells into hyporesponsive states. Targeting DGK is a promising strategy for coping with cancer; its blockade could reinstate T cell attack on tumors while limiting tumor growth, due to positive DGK functions in several oncogenic pathways. Here we made a side-by-side comparison of the effects of commercial pharmacological DGK inhibitors on T cell responses with those promoted by DGK and DGK genetic deletion or silencing. We show the specificity for DGK of DGK inhibitors I and II and the structurally similar compound ritanserin. Inhibitor treatment promoted Ras/ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase) signaling and AP-1 (Activator protein-1) transcription, facilitated DGK membrane localization, reduced the requirement for costimulation, and cooperated with enhanced activation following DGK silencing/deletion. DGKiII and ritanserin had similar effects on TCR proximal signaling, but ritanserin counteracted long-term T cell activation, an effect that was potentiated in DGK-/- cells. In contrast with enhanced activation triggered by pharmacological inhibition, DGK silencing/genetic deletion led to impaired Lck (lymphocyte-specific protein tyrosine kinase) activation and limited costimulation responses. Our results demonstrate that pharmacological inhibition of DGK downstream of the TCR provides a gain-of-function effect that amplifies the DAG-dependent signaling cascade, an ability that could be exploited therapeutically to reinvigorate T cells to attack tumors.

Citation: Arranz-Nicolás J, Ávila-Flores A, Mérida I (2018) DGKα inactivation is an integral component of the costimulatory pathway that amplifies TCR signals. Proceedings of the III Congreso de Señalización Celular, SECUAH 2018. 20-22 de marzo, 2018. Universidad de Alcalá. Alcalá de Henares, Madrid. España. Sesión. dianas 7 (1): e201803. ISSN 1886-8746 (electronic) journal.dianas.e201803. URI http://hdl.handle.net/10017/15181

Copyright: ©2018 Arranz-Nicolás J, Ávila-Flores A, Mérida I. Algunos derechos reservados. This is an open-access work licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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