Strong TCR ligation without costimulation causes rapid onset of Fas-dependent apoptosis of naive murine CD4+ T cells

H Kishimoto, J Sprent - The Journal of immunology, 1999 - journals.aai.org
H Kishimoto, J Sprent
The Journal of immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
Activation-induced cell death of T cells typically occurs late in the primary response after a
prior proliferative response. Here, we describe a novel form of cell death in which purified
naive murine CD4+ cells undergo apoptosis within 18 h in vitro after strong TCR ligation.
Such rapid-onset TCR-mediated death of T cells does not involve cell division and is Fas-
dependent, inhibited by CD28 (and IL-6) costimulation and enhanced by IL-4 and IL-7; by
contrast, spontaneous death of CD4+ cells cultured alone is Fas-independent and inhibited …
Abstract
Activation-induced cell death of T cells typically occurs late in the primary response after a prior proliferative response. Here, we describe a novel form of cell death in which purified naive murine CD4+ cells undergo apoptosis within 18 h in vitro after strong TCR ligation. Such rapid-onset TCR-mediated death of T cells does not involve cell division and is Fas-dependent, inhibited by CD28 (and IL-6) costimulation and enhanced by IL-4 and IL-7; by contrast, spontaneous death of CD4+ cells cultured alone is Fas-independent and inhibited by IL-4 and IL-7. TCR-mediated Fas-dependent death of CD4+ cells is prevented by combined TCR/Fas ligation and by drugs that inhibit calcineurin-dependent signaling and mitogen-activated protein kinase MEK1 activation.
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