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1.
Nat Immunol ; 13(12): 1213-21, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23086448

ABSTRACT

CD46 is a complement regulator with important roles related to the immune response. CD46 functions as a pathogen receptor and is a potent costimulator for the induction of interferon-γ (IFN-γ)-secreting effector T helper type 1 (T(H)1) cells and their subsequent switch into interleukin 10 (IL-10)-producing regulatory T cells. Here we identified the Notch family member Jagged1 as a physiological ligand for CD46. Furthermore, we found that CD46 regulated the expression of Notch receptors and ligands during T cell activation and that disturbance of the CD46-Notch crosstalk impeded induction of IFN-γ and switching to IL-10. Notably, CD4(+) T cells from CD46-deficient patients and patients with hypomorphic mutations in the gene encoding Jagged1 (Alagille syndrome) failed to mount appropriate T(H)1 responses in vitro and in vivo, which suggested that CD46-Jagged1 crosstalk is responsible for the recurrent infections in subpopulations of these patients.


Subject(s)
Calcium-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Lymphocyte Activation , Membrane Cofactor Protein/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Th1 Cells/immunology , Adult , Alagille Syndrome/genetics , Alagille Syndrome/immunology , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Interferon-gamma/metabolism , Interleukin-10/immunology , Interleukin-10/metabolism , Jagged-1 Protein , Mice , Mice, SCID , Mice, Transgenic , RNA Interference , RNA, Small Interfering , Serrate-Jagged Proteins , Th1 Cells/metabolism , alpha Catenin/genetics
2.
J Biotechnol ; 135(1): 1-15, 2008 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18395925

ABSTRACT

Protein-protein interactions represent a major potential drug target for many human diseases, but these are unanimously considered undruggable with small chemical molecules. We have developed 3-SPLINT, a novel technology for the selection of antibodies that are intrinsically endowed with the ability to interfere with a given protein-protein interaction. The selection procedure exploits the recently described yeast SPLINT libraries of intrabodies, adapting them to a reverse-hybrid system, yielding the selection of recombinant antibodies that are able to disrupt a target protein-protein interaction in vivo. This class of antibodies should therefore perturb an individual protein-protein interaction, without perturbing the scaffolding function of the target protein in that complex, or other protein interactions of that same protein. We provide here a proof of concept of the technology, by the de novo selection of antibodies against two distinct interacting protein pairs: the GABARAP, which interact with the gamma2 subunit of GABA(A) receptor, and the p65 protein dimer, involved in the NF-kappaB-mediated signalling transduction pathway. Intrabodies selected against the latter were functionally validated in cells. Such antibodies, by interfering with the dimerization domain of p65, lead to an activation of the NF-kappaB-mediated transcriptional activity, which is normally inhibited by p65 knock-down RNAi. This provides a clear-cut demonstration that interfering with a protein interaction can be functionally very different from physically removing one of the interacting proteins. The 3-SPLINT approach provides a general and finer tool for the functional validation of selected protein interactions in protein networks, and is ideally applied to protein "hubs", displaying multiple distinct interactions. 3-SPLINT will therefore complement RNAi-based approaches, in the toolkit of target validation strategies, and is amenable to the systematic isolation of comprehensive sets of antibodies against most protein-protein interactions of a given protein network.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/genetics , Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology , Drug Delivery Systems/methods , Peptide Library , Protein Engineering/methods , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs/genetics , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs/immunology , Protein Interaction Mapping , Antibodies, Monoclonal/metabolism
3.
J Mol Biol ; 374(3): 641-54, 2007 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17950312

ABSTRACT

The selective knock-down of cellular proteins has proven useful for in vivo studies of protein function and RNAi methods are readily available for this purpose. However, interfering directly at the protein level may have distinct advantages, with the intracellular targeting of antibodies (intrabodies) representing an attractive option, although not a general one. We demonstrate a novel, general strategy named suicide (or silencing) intrabody technology (SIT), based on the inducible degradation of intrabodies, which are equipped with proteasome-targeting sequences and thus converted into suicide intrabodies. We show that suicide intrabodies are able to redirect the target cellular proteins upon stimulus administration to the proteolytic machinery, thus resulting in selective protein knock-down. Remarkably, suicide intrabody acts in a catalytic fashion. SIT is a ligand-inducible strategy, potentially applicable to any protein of interest and does not require the engineering of cellular proteolytic enzymes. SIT represents a general approach to confer "neutralizing" properties to any intrabody, a valuable feature, given the present impossibility to select a priori intrinsically neutralizing antibodies. This knock-down strategy, together with available methods to isolate functional intrabodies, should allow the large-scale investigation of intracellular protein networks.


Subject(s)
Antibodies/immunology , Gene Silencing , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Proteins/metabolism , Base Sequence , Cell Line , DNA Primers , Flow Cytometry , Humans , Ligands , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/immunology , RNA Interference
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