Circadian Clocks in Mouse and Human CD4+ T Cells

Though it has been shown that immunological functions of CD4+ T cells are time of day-dependent, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely obscure. To address the question whether T cells themselves harbor a functional clock driving circadian rhythms of immune function, we analyzed clock ge...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 6; no. 12; p. e29801
Main Authors Bollinger, Thomas, Leutz, Anton, Leliavski, Alexei, Skrum, Ludmila, Kovac, Judit, Bonacina, Luigi, Benedict, Christian, Lange, Tanja, Westermann, Jürgen, Oster, Henrik, Solbach, Werner
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 28.12.2011
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Though it has been shown that immunological functions of CD4+ T cells are time of day-dependent, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely obscure. To address the question whether T cells themselves harbor a functional clock driving circadian rhythms of immune function, we analyzed clock gene expression by qPCR in unstimulated CD4+ T cells and immune responses of PMA/ionomycin stimulated CD4+ T cells by FACS analysis purified from blood of healthy subjects at different time points throughout the day. Molecular clock as well as immune function was further analyzed in unstimulated T cells which were cultured in serum-free medium with circadian clock reporter systems. We found robust rhythms of clock gene expression as well as, after stimulation, IL-2, IL-4, IFN-γ production and CD40L expression in freshly isolated CD4+ T cells. Further analysis of IFN-γ and CD40L in cultivated T cells revealed that these parameters remain rhythmic in vitro. Moreover, circadian luciferase reporter activity in CD4+ T cells and in thymic sections from PER2::LUCIFERASE reporter mice suggest that endogenous T cell clock rhythms are self-sustained under constant culture conditions. Microarray analysis of stimulated CD4+ T cell cultures revealed regulation of the NF-κB pathway as a candidate mechanism mediating circadian immune responses. Collectively, these data demonstrate for the first time that CD4+ T cell responses are regulated by an intrinsic cellular circadian oscillator capable of driving rhythmic CD4+ T cell immune responses.
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Conceived and designed the experiments: TB A. Leutz LS A. Leliavski HO JK CB TL JW WS. Performed the experiments: TB A. Leutz A. Leliavski LS TL. Analyzed the data: TB A. Leutz A. Leliavski LB CB TL HO WS. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: TB HO CB TL JW WS. Wrote the paper: TB HO CB WS.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0029801