PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Autoimmunity-associated LYP-W620 does not impair thymic negative selection of autoreactive T cells.

  • Dennis J Wu,
  • Wenbo Zhou,
  • Sarah Enouz,
  • Valeria Orrú,
  • Stephanie M Stanford,
  • Christian J Maine,
  • Novella Rapini,
  • Kristy Sawatzke,
  • Isaac Engel,
  • Edoardo Fiorillo,
  • Linda A Sherman,
  • Mitch Kronenberg,
  • Dietmar Zehn,
  • Erik Peterson,
  • Nunzio Bottini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0086677
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e86677

Abstract

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A C1858T (R620W) variation in the PTPN22 gene encoding the tyrosine phosphatase LYP is a major risk factor for human autoimmunity. LYP is a known negative regulator of signaling through the T cell receptor (TCR), and murine Ptpn22 plays a role in thymic selection. However, the mechanism of action of the R620W variant in autoimmunity remains unclear. One model holds that LYP-W620 is a gain-of-function phosphatase that causes alterations in thymic negative selection and/or thymic output of regulatory T cells (Treg) through inhibition of thymic TCR signaling. To test this model, we generated mice in which the human LYP-W620 variant or its phosphatase-inactive mutant are expressed in developing thymocytes under control of the proximal Lck promoter. We found that LYP-W620 expression results in diminished thymocyte TCR signaling, thus modeling a "gain-of-function" of LYP at the signaling level. However, LYP-W620 transgenic mice display no alterations of thymic negative selection and no anomalies in thymic output of CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg were detected in these mice. Lck promoter-directed expression of the human transgene also causes no alteration in thymic repertoire or increase in disease severity in a model of rheumatoid arthritis, which depends on skewed thymic selection of CD4(+) T cells. Our data suggest that a gain-of-function of LYP is unlikely to increase risk of autoimmunity through alterations of thymic selection and that LYP likely acts in the periphery perhaps selectively in regulatory T cells or in another cell type to increase risk of autoimmunity.