@article{MuhammadRudolfPhametal.2018, author = {Muhammad, Khalid and Rudolf, Ronald and Pham, Duong Anh Thuy and Klein-Hessling, Stefan and Takata, Katsuyoshi and Matsushita, Nobuko and Ellenrieder, Volker and Kondo, Eisaku and  Serfling, Edgar}, title = {Induction of Short NFATc1/αA Isoform Interferes with Peripheral B Cell Differentiation}, series = {Frontiers in Immunology}, volume = {9}, journal = {Frontiers in Immunology}, number = {32}, issn = {1664-3224}, doi = {10.3389/fimmu.2018.00032}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-197501}, year = {2018}, abstract = {In lymphocytes, immune receptor signals induce the rapid nuclear translocation of preformed cytosolic NFAT proteins. Along with co-stimulatory signals, persistent immune receptor signals lead to high levels of NFATc1/αA, a short NFATc1 isoform, in effector lymphocytes. Whereas NFATc1 is not expressed in plasma cells, in germinal centers numerous centrocytic B cells express nuclear NFATc1/αA. When overexpressed in chicken DT40 B cells or murine WEHI 231 B cells, NFATc1/αA suppressed their cell death induced by B cell receptor signals and affected the expression of genes controlling the germinal center reaction and plasma cell formation. Among those is the Prdm1 gene encoding Blimp-1, a key factor of plasma cell formation. By binding to a regulatory DNA element within exon 1 of the Prdm1 gene, NFATc1/αA suppresses Blimp-1 expression. Since expression of a constitutive active version of NFATc1/αA interfered with Prdm1 RNA expression, LPS-mediated differentiation of splenic B cells to plasmablasts in vitro and reduced immunoglobulin production in vivo, one may conclude that NFATc1/αA plays an important role in controlling plasmablast/plasma cell formation.}, language = {en} } @article{KleinHesslingRudolfMuhammadetal.2016, author = {Klein-Hessling, Stefan and Rudolf, Ronald and Muhammad, Khalid and Knobeloch, Klaus-Peter and Maqbool, Muhammad Ahmad and Cauchy, Pierre and Andrau, Jean-Christophe and Avots, Andris and Talora, Claudio and Ellenrieder, Volker and Screpanti, Isabella and Serfling, Edgar and Patra, Amiya Kumar}, title = {A threshold level of NFATc1 activity facilitates thymocyte differentiation and opposes notch-driven leukaemia development}, series = {Nature Communications}, volume = {7}, journal = {Nature Communications}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms11841}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-172974}, year = {2016}, abstract = {NFATc1 plays a critical role in double-negative thymocyte survival and differentiation. However, the signals that regulate Nfatc1 expression are incompletely characterized. Here we show a developmental stage-specific differential expression pattern of Nfatc1 driven by the distal (P1) or proximal (P2) promoters in thymocytes. Whereas, preTCR-negative thymocytes exhibit only P2 promoter-derived Nfatc1β expression, preTCR-positive thymocytes express both Nfatc1β and P1 promoter-derived Nfatc1α transcripts. Inducing NFATc1α activity from P1 promoter in preTCR-negative thymocytes, in addition to the NFATc1β from P2 promoter impairs thymocyte development resulting in severe T-cell lymphopenia. In addition, we show that NFATc1 activity suppresses the B-lineage potential of immature thymocytes, and consolidates their differentiation to T cells. Further, in the pTCR-positive DN3 cells, a threshold level of NFATc1 activity is vital in facilitating T-cell differentiation and to prevent Notch3-induced T-acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. Altogether, our results show NFATc1 activity is crucial in determining the T-cell fate of thymocytes.}, language = {en} }