• Title of article

    T cell receptor-stimulated generation of hydrogen peroxide inhibits MEK-ERK activation and lck serine phosphorylation

  • Author/Authors

    J. Kwon، نويسنده , , S. Devadas، نويسنده , , M. S. Williams and P. D. McFadden، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    406
  • To page
    417
  • Abstract
    Previous studies indicated that antigen receptor (TcR) stimulation of mature T cells induced rapid generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). The goal of the current study was to examine the role(s) of ROS in TcR signal transduction, with a focus upon the redox-sensitive MAPK family. TcR cross-linking of primary human T blasts and Jurkat human T cells rapidly activated the ERK, JNK, p38 and Akt kinases within minutes, and was temporally associated with TcR-stimulated production of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). TcR-induced activation of ERK was selectively augmented and sustained in the presence of pharmacologic antioxidants that can quench or inhibit H2O2 production (NAC, MnTBAP and Ebselen, but not DPI), while activation of JNK and Akt were largely unaffected. This was paralleled by concurrent changes in MEK1/2 phosphorylation, suggesting that ROS acted upstream of MEK-ERK activation. Molecular targeting of H2O2 by overexpression of peroxiredoxin II, a thioredoxin dependent peroxidase, also increased and sustained ERK and MEK activation upon TcR cross-linking. Enhancement of ERK phosphorylation by antioxidants correlated with increased and sustained serine phosphorylation of the src-family kinase lck, a known ERK substrate. Thus, the data suggest that TcR-stimulated production of hydrogen peroxide negatively feeds back to dampen antigen-stimulated ERK activation and this redox-dependent regulation may serve to modulate key steps in TcR signaling.
  • Keywords
    Free radicals , ERK , hydrogen peroxide , T lymphocytes , Lck , MAPK
  • Journal title
    Free Radical Biology and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Free Radical Biology and Medicine
  • Record number

    519553