CD5 signal transduction: Positive or negative modulation of antigen receptor signaling: Critical Reviews in Immunology

F. Lozano, M. Simarro, J. Calvo, J. M. Vila, O. Padilla, M. A. Bowen, K. S. Campbell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

62 Scopus citations

Abstract

The CD5 lymphocyte surface glycoprotein is a coreceptor involved in the modulation of antigen-specific receptor- mediated activation and differentiation signals. Although first considered a costimulatory molecule in mature peripheral T cells, recent studies of CD5(-/-) mice have opened the possibility that CD5 may also mediate inhibitory signals that attenuate TCR/CD3- and BCR-mediated triggering in thymocytes and a subgroup of B cells (B-1a cells), respectively. The ultimate molecular basis for these differential modulatory properties of CD5, depending on the context of lymphocyte subset and differentiation stage, are presently unknown and are an issue of current intensive investigation. Here, we review recent reports, both contradictory and complementary, focused on CD5-mediated molecular intracellular signaling events that could provide the basis for its immunomodulatory properties.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)347-358
Number of pages12
JournalCrit. Rev. Immunol.
Volume20
Issue number4
StatePublished - 2000

Keywords

  • CD5
  • CD6
  • Lymphocyte scavenger receptors
  • Signal transduction

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