l-arginine availability regulates T-lymphocyte cell-cycle progression

Paulo C. Rodrı́guez(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans), David Quiceno(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans), Augusto C. Ochoa(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans)
Blood
October 5, 2006
Cited by 887Open Access
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Abstract

L-arginine (L-Arg) plays a central role in several biologic systems including the regulation of T-cell function. L-Arg depletion by myeloid-derived suppressor cells producing arginase I is seen in patients with cancer inducing T-cell anergy. We studied how L-Arg starvation could regulate T-cell-cycle progression. Stimulated T cells cultured in the absence of L-Arg are arrested in the G0-G1phase of the cell cycle. This was associated with an inability of T cells to up-regulate cyclin D3 and cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (cdk4), but not cdk6, resulting in an impaired downstream signaling with a decreased phosphorylation of Rb protein and a low expression and binding of E2F1. Silencing of cyclin D3 reproduced the cell cycle arrest caused by L-Arg starvation. The regulation of cyclin D3 and cdk4 by L-Arg starvation occurs at transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. Signaling through GCN2 kinase is triggered during amino acid starvation. Experiments demonstrated that T cells from GCN2 knock-out mice did not show a decreased proliferation and were able to up-regulate cyclin D3 when cultured in the absence of L-Arg. These results contribute to the understanding of a central mechanism by which cancer and other diseases characterized by high arginase I production may cause T-cell dysfunction.


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