Reactive Oxidative Species-Modulated Ca2+ Release Regulates β2 Integrin Activation on CD4+ CD28null T Cells of Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients.
Yvonne SamstagNicolai V BogertGuido H WabnitzShabana DinMarkus TherreFlorian LeuschnerHugo A KatusMathias H KonstandinPublished in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950) (2020)
The number and activity of T cell subsets in the atherosclerotic plaques are critical for the prognosis of patients with acute coronary syndrome. β2 Integrin activation is pivotal for T cell recruitment and correlates with future cardiac events. Despite this knowledge, differential regulation of adhesiveness in T cell subsets has not been explored yet. In this study, we show that in human T cells, SDF-1α-mediated β2 integrin activation is driven by a, so far, not-described reactive oxidative species (ROS)-regulated calcium influx. Furthermore, we show that CD4+CD28null T cells represent a highly reactive subset showing 25-fold stronger β2 integrin activation upon SDF-1α stimulation compared with CD28+ T cells. Interestingly, ROS-dependent Ca release was much more prevalent in the pathogenetically pivotal CD28null subset compared with the CD28+ T cells, whereas the established mediators of the classical pathways for β2 integrin activation (PKC, PI3K, and PLC) were similarly activated in both T cell subsets. Thus, interference with the calcium flux attenuates spontaneous adhesion of CD28null T cells from acute coronary syndrome patients, and calcium ionophores abolished the observed differences in the adhesion properties between CD28+ and CD28null T cells. Likewise, the adhesion of these T cell subsets was indistinguishable in the presence of exogenous ROS/H2O2 Together, these data provide a molecular explanation of the role of ROS in pathogenesis of plaque destabilization.
Keyphrases
- acute coronary syndrome
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- cell adhesion
- newly diagnosed
- dna damage
- cell death
- peripheral blood
- reactive oxygen species
- chronic kidney disease
- healthcare
- prognostic factors
- endothelial cells
- biofilm formation
- coronary artery disease
- escherichia coli
- atrial fibrillation
- left ventricular
- big data
- nk cells
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- patient reported