Requirement for the orphan steroid receptor Nur77 in apoptosis of T-cell hybridomas
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 367 (6460) , 277-281
- https://doi.org/10.1038/367277a0
Abstract
Apoptosis is a phenomenon observed during development of many cell types in many organisms. It is an internal, programmed cell death characterized by DNA fragmentation into nucleosome-size pieces. Anti-CD3-induced apoptosis in T-cell hybridomas and immature thymocytes requires new gene transcription and may be related to negative selection during T-cell development. Using subtractive hybridization, we isolated a complementary DNA clone encoding the orphan steroid receptor Nur77 (refs 7-9). It shows different patterns of messenger RNA induction between apoptotic and stimulated T cells. We report here the use of gel shift analysis to demonstrate that the Nur77 protein is present at high levels in apoptotic T-cell hybridomas and apoptotic thymocytes, but not in growing T cells or stimulated splenocytes. A Nur77 dominant negative protected T-cell hybridomas from activation-induced apoptosis. Hence Nur77 is necessary for induced apoptosis in T-cell hybridomas.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- p53 is required for radiation-induced apoptosis in mouse thymocytesNature, 1993
- Bcl-2: a repressor of lymphocyte deathImmunology Today, 1992
- Role for c-myc in Activation-Induced Apoptotic Cell Death in T Cell HybridomasScience, 1992
- Induction of apoptosis in fibroblasts by c-myc proteinCell, 1992
- The lpr and gld genes in systemic autoimmunity: life and death in the Fas laneImmunology Today, 1992
- bcl-2 inhibits multiple forms of apoptosis but not negative selection in thymocytesCell, 1991
- Wild-type p53 induces apoptosis of myeloid leukaemic cells that is inhibited by interleukin-6Nature, 1991
- Antibodies to CD3/T-cell receptor complex induce death by apoptosis in immature T cells in thymic culturesNature, 1989
- Establishment of mouse cell lines which constitutively secrete large quantities of interleukin 2, 3, 4 or 5, using modified cDNA expression vectorsEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1988
- Ia molecule-associated selectivity in T cell recognition of a 23-amino-acid peptide of lysozyme.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1986