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MicroRNA miR-181—A Rheostat for TCR Signaling in Thymic Selection and Peripheral T-Cell Function

Zoe Grewers, Andreas Krueger

2020International Journal of Molecular Sciences32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The selection of T cells during intra-thymic d evelopment is crucial to obtain a functional and simultaneously not self-reactive peripheral T cell repertoire. However, selection is a complex process dependent on T cell receptor (TCR) thresholds that remain incompletely understood. In peripheral T cells, activation, clonal expansion, and contraction of the active T cell pool, as well as other processes depend on TCR signal strength. Members of the microRNA (miRNA) miR-181 family have been shown to be dynamically regulated during T cell development as well as dependent on the activation stage of T cells. Indeed, it has been shown that expression of miR-181a leads to the downregulation of multiple phosphatases, implicating miR-181a as ''rheostat'' of TCR signaling. Consistently, genetic models have revealed an essential role of miR-181a/b-1 for the generation of unconventional T cells as well as a function in tuning TCR sensitivity in peripheral T cells during aging. Here, we review these broad roles of miR-181 family members in T cell function via modulating TCR signal strength.

Topics & Concepts

T-cell receptorBiologyCell biologyT cellDownregulation and upregulationNegative selectionPeripheral tolerancemicroRNASignal transductionImmunologyGeneticsImmune systemGeneGenomeImmune Cell Function and InteractionMicroRNA in disease regulationT-cell and B-cell Immunology
MicroRNA miR-181—A Rheostat for TCR Signaling in Thymic Selection and Peripheral T-Cell Function | Litcius