Publication | Open Access
Protein phosphatase 2A has an essential role in promoting thymocyte survival during selection
25
Citations
28
References
2019
Year
The development of thymocytes to mature T cells in the thymus is tightly controlled by cellular selection, in which only a small fraction of thymocytes equipped with proper quality of TCRs progress to maturation. It is pivotal to protect the survival of the few T cells, which pass the selection. However, the signaling events, which safeguard the cell survival in thymus, are not totally understood. In this study, protein Ser/Thr phosphorylation in thymocytes undergoing positive selection is profiled by mass spectrometry. The results revealed large numbers of dephosphorylation changes upon T cell receptor (TCR) activation during positive selection. Subsequent substrate analysis pinpointed protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) as the enzyme responsible for the dephosphorylation changes in developing thymocytes. PP2A catalytic subunit α (<i>Ppp2ca</i>) deletion in the T cell lineage in <i>Ppp2ca</i><sup>flox/flox</sup>-Lck-Cre mice (PP2A cKO) displayed dysregulated dephosphorylation of apoptosis-related proteins in double-positive (DP) cells and caused substantially decreased numbers of DP CD4<sup>+</sup> CD8<sup>+</sup> cells. Increased levels of apoptosis in PP2A cKO DP cells were found to underlie aberrant thymocyte development. Finally, the defective thymocyte development in PP2A cKO mice could be rescued by either <i>Bcl2</i> transgene expression or by <i>p53</i> knockout. In summary, our work reveals an essential role of PP2A in promoting thymocyte development through the regulation of cell survival.
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