Abstract
Members of protein kinase D (PKD) family serine/threonine kinases (PKD1, PKD2 and PKD3) are expressed in wide range of cells and regulate various cellular responses including immune responses. We have previously shown that PKD is involved in the signaling pathways of a human CD4(+) T cell clone stimulated with its cognate antigen. Contrary to foregoing publications, PKD1 mRNA was not detected in human T cells, Jurkat cells and mouse thymocytes and splenocytes. Instead, mass-spectrometric and reverse transcription-PCR analyses revealed that PKD2 was predominant in T cells. To investigate the roles of PKD2, wild-type (WT) and constitutively active (CA) PKD2 were expressed in Jurkat cells together with IL-2 promoter-driven reporter gene. Expression of WT-PKD2 enhanced IL-2 promoter activity upon stimulation with anti-CD3 mAb, while expression of CA-PKD2 inhibited IL-2 promoter activity and induced cell death. Although the cell death was suppressed by the treatment with caspase inhibitor, the IL-2 promoter activity was rarely recovered in CA-PKD2-expressing cells upon TCR stimulation. WT-PKD2 localized mainly in the cytoplasm translocated into the nucleus after TCR stimulation, while CA-PKD2 was present in both the cytoplasm and the nuclei before and after stimulation. Proteomic analyses revealed that CA-PKD2 enhanced the amount of phosphorylated SET protein, a histone chaperon that regulates histone acetylation, in Jurkat cells and the recombinant SET protein was phosphorylated by CA-PKD2 in vitro. The data provide a renewing insight into the subset of PKD family kinases expressed in T cells and suggest that PKD2 is involved in IL-2 promoter regulation and cell death depending on its activity upon TCR stimulation.
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