Suppression of Early T-Cell Receptor-Triggered Cellular Activation by the Janus Kinase 3 Inhibitor WHI-P-1541 (original) (raw)
Background. Therapeutic targeting of Janus kinase 3 (JAK3) has received particular attention, because it is associated with the common ␥ signaling of cytokine receptors and thus vitally influences T-cell growth and survival. Recent evidence, however, indicates a critical role for JAK3 in signaling linked to the T-cell antigen receptor. Methods. In this study we investigated whether targeting JAK3 with a rationally designed inhibitor affects early T-cell activation events. T cells were stimulated by CD3 and CD28 cross-linking, and interleukin (IL)-2 production, activation marker expression, increase of free intracellular Ca 2؉ concentration, activation of the extracellular-related kinase, and nuclear translocation of transcription factors were evaluated. Results. We found that JAK3 inhibitor treatment dramatically impaired T-cell-receptor (TCR)-induced IL-2 production, surface activation marker expression (CD69, CD154), and homotypic T-cell aggregation. Accordingly, mRNA production of IL-2, interferon-␥, and IL-10 was profoundly inhibited. Molecular analysis revealed that TCR-triggered phosphorylation of phospholipase C-␥1, increase in cytoplasmic Ca 2؉ concentration, and activation of extracellular-related kinase were markedly reduced by the JAK3 inhibitor, resulting in substantially decreased DNA binding of nuclear factor of activated T cells and alkaline phosphatase-1 and subsequent IL-2 promoter activation. Remarkably, on TCR-independent stimulation, IL-2 production, CD69 expression, and blast formation were completely insensitive to JAK3 inhibitor treatment. Conclusion. These data indicate that pharmacologic targeting of JAK3 uncouples early TCR-triggered signaling from essential downstream events, which may have important implications for the use of such compounds in T-cell-mediated disorders such as allograft rejection or graft-versus-host disease.