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Article
Nature Immunology  4, 874 - 881 (2003)
Published online: 17 August 2003; | doi:10.1038/ni966

The threshold pattern of calcineurin-dependent gene expression is altered by loss of the endogenous inhibitor calcipressin

Sandra Ryeom1, Rebecca J Greenwald2, Arlene H Sharpe2 & Frank McKeon1

1  Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, 240 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.

2  Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, 221 Longwood Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.

Correspondence should be addressed to Frank McKeon fmckeon@hms.harvard.edu
Calcineurin links calcium signaling to transcriptional responses in the immune, nervous and cardiovascular systems. To determine the function of the calcipressins, a family of putative calcineurin inhibitors, we assessed the calcineurin-dependent process of T cell activation in mice engineered to lack the gene encoding calcipressin 1 (Csp1). Csp1 regulated calcineurin in vivo, and genes triggered in an immune response had unique transactivation thresholds for T cell receptor stimulation. In the absence of Csp1, the apparent transactivation thresholds for all these genes were shifted because of enhanced calcineurin activity. This unbridled calcineurin activity drove Fas ligand expression, which normally requires high T cell receptor stimulation and results in the premature death of T helper type 1 cells. Thus, calcipressins modulate the pattern of calcineurin-dependent transcription, and may influence calcineurin activity beyond calcium to integrate a broad array of signals into the cellular response.

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Nature Immunology
ISSN: 1529-2908
EISSN: 1529-2916
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