Litcius/Paper detail

Roles of Hopx in the differentiation and functions of immune cells

Jessica Bourque, Robert Kousnetsov, Daniel Hawiger

2022European Journal of Cell Biology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Homeodomain only protein (Hopx, HOPX) is a highly evolutionarily conserved, homeodomain-containing, small protein expressed in multiple tissues and cell types, including those of hematopoietic origin. The quasi-ubiquitous presence of Hopx contrasts with its specialized and context-dependent roles in various cell lineages. Recently, versatile functions of Hopx have been revealed in immune cells, including T lymphocytes with effector and regulatory roles. The induction of Hopx expression can indicate early developmental and differentiation pathways, and early Hopx expression characterizes the recently identified pre-effector T cells that become destined for subsequent effector differentiation. Further, specific molecular mechanisms of Hopx are indispensable for the functional homeostasis of peripherally induced regulatory T cells (pTreg cells). Here we offer a perspective on these diverse roles of Hopx in immune cells and discuss the recent advances that helped to clarify the relevant functions and mechanisms of Hopx.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEffectorImmune systemHomeoboxContext (archaeology)Cell biologyCellular differentiationGeneGeneticsGene expressionPaleontologyT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmune Cell Function and InteractionImmunotherapy and Immune Responses