Person:
Jiménez Reinoso, Anaïs

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Anaïs
Last Name
Jiménez Reinoso
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Universidad Complutense de Madrid
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    CD3G or CD3D Knockdown in Mature, but Not Immature, T Lymphocytes Similarly Cripples the Human TCRαβ Complex
    (Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, 2021) Garcillán Goyoaga, Beatriz de; Fuentes, Patricia; Marín Marín, Ana Victoria; Fernández Megido, Rebeca; Chacón Arguedas, Carlos Daniel; S. Mazariegos, Marina; González Laborda, Raquel; Jiménez Reinoso, Anaïs; Muñoz Ruiz, Miguel; Cárdenas Mastracusa, Paula; Fernández-Malavé, Edgar; Toribio, Maria Luisa; Regueiro González-Barros, José Ramón
    The human αβ T-cell receptor (TCR) is composed of a variable heterodimer (TCRαβ) and three invariant dimers (CD3γε, CD3δε, and ζζ/CD2472). The role of each invariant chain in the stepwise interactions among TCR chains along the assembly is still not fully understood. Despite the high sequence homology between CD3γ and CD3δ, the clinical consequences of the corresponding immunodeficiencies (ID) in humans are very different (mild and severe, respectively), and mouse models do not recapitulate findings in human ID. To try to understand such disparities, we stably knocked down (KD) CD3D or CD3G expression in the human Jurkat T-cell line and analyzed comparatively their impact on TCRαβ assembly, transport, and surface expression. The results indicated that TCR ensembles were less stable and CD3ε levels were lower when CD3γ, rather than CD3δ, was scarce. However, both defective TCR ensembles were strongly retained in the ER, lacked ζζ/CD2472, and barely reached the T-cell surface (<11% of normal controls) in any of the CD3 KD cells. This is in sharp contrast to human CD3γ ID, whose mature T cells express higher levels of surface TCR (>30% vs. normal controls). CD3 KD of human T-cell progenitors followed by mouse fetal thymus organ cultures showed high plasticity in emerging immature polyclonal T lymphocytes that allowed for the expression of significant TCR levels which may then signal for survival in CD3γ, but not in CD3δ deficiency, and explain the immunological and clinical disparities of such ID cases.
  • Item
    T-cell receptor signaling in Schimke immunoosseous dysplasia is SMARCAL1-independent
    (Frontiers in Immunology, 2022) Marín Marín, Ana Victoria; Jiménez Reinoso, Anaïs; Mazariegos, Marina S.; Román Ortiz, Elena; Regueiro González-Barros, José Ramón
    Schimke immuno-osseous dysplasia (SIOD) caused by mutations in SMARCAL1 is an ultra-rare disease characterized by specific facial features, skeletal dysplasia, and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome, which often leads to kidney failure and requires transplantation. Cellular (T-cell) deficiency, lymphopenia, and infections have been frequently reported, but whether they are due to T-cell-intrinsic defects in T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling associated with SMARCAL1 deficiency or to T-cell-extrinsic effects such as the impaired proliferation of hematopoietic precursors or T-cell-specific immunosuppression after renal transplantation remains unknown. We have explored the effects of SMARCAL1 deficiency on T-cell receptor signaling in primary and immortalized T cells from a 9-year-old SIOD patient under immunosuppression treatment when compared to healthy donors. Immortalized T cells recapitulated the SMARCAL1 deficiency of the patient, as judged by their impaired response to gamma irradiation. The results indicated that TCR-mediated signaling was normal in SIOD-derived immortalized T cells but strongly impaired in the primary T cells of the patient, although rescued with TCR-independent stimuli such as PMA + ionomycin, suggesting that SIOD-associated T-cell signaling is not intrinsically defective but rather the result of the impaired proliferation of hematopoietic precursors or of T-cell-specific immunosuppression. The lack of early thymic emigrants in our patients may support the former hypothesis.