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C-type lectin-like CD161, a class II transmembrane protein, is a surface receptor expressed by NK cells and T cells. In coeliac disease, CD161 was expressed more frequently on gluten-reactive CD4 + T cells compared to other memory CD4 + T cells isolated from the same tissue compartment. CD161 is a putative co-signalling molecule that was proposed to act as co-stimulatory receptor in the context of signalling through TCR, but contradicting results were published. In order to understand the role of CD161 in gluten-reactive CD4 + T cells, we combined T cell stimulation assays or T cell proliferation assays with ligation of CD161 and intracellular cytokine staining. We found that CD161 ligation provided neither co-stimulatory nor co-inhibitory signals to modulate proliferation and IFN-γ or IL-21 production by gluten-reactive CD4 + T cell clones. Thus, we suggest that CD161 does not function as a co-signalling receptor in the context of gluten-reactive CD4 + T cells. © 2020 The Scandinavian Foundation for Immunology.

Citation

Łukasz Wyrożemski, Ludvig M Sollid, Shuo-Wang Qiao. C-type lectin-like CD161 is not a co-signalling receptor in gluten-reactive CD4 + T cells. Scandinavian journal of immunology. 2021 Jun;93(6):e13016

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PMID: 33368526

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