Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase–Independent Signaling Pathways Contribute to ICOS-Mediated T Cell Costimulation in Acute Graft-Versus-Host Disease in Mice
Li J, Heinrichs J, Leconte J, Haarberg K, Semple K, Liu C, Gigoux M, Kornete M, Piccirillo C, Suh W, Yu X. Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase–Independent Signaling Pathways Contribute to ICOS-Mediated T Cell Costimulation in Acute Graft-Versus-Host Disease in Mice. The Journal Of Immunology 2013, 191: 200-207. PMID: 23729441, PMCID: PMC4318500, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1203485.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAcute DiseaseAnimalsDisease Models, AnimalGene Knock-In TechniquesGraft vs Host DiseaseInducible T-Cell Co-Stimulator ProteinLymphocyte ActivationMiceMice, 129 StrainMice, Inbred BALB CMice, Inbred C57BLMice, KnockoutMice, TransgenicPhosphatidylinositol 3-KinaseSignal TransductionT-Lymphocyte SubsetsConceptsCD8 T cellsCD4 T cellsT cellsHost diseaseWild-type CD8 T cellsCD8 T cell compartmentAllogeneic bone marrow transplantationAcute Graft-VersusPathogenic potentialTotal T cellsAlloreactive T cellsBone marrow transplantationT cell compartmentWild-type T cellsIntracellular calcium mobilizationVivo pathogenic potentialT cell costimulationT cell activationKnockout T cellsAcute graftAcute GVHDGraft-VersusSevere GVHDGVHD modelMarrow transplantation