Theileria parva-Transformed T Cells Show Enhanced Resistance to Fas/Fas Ligand-Induced Apoptosis
- 1 August 2003
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 171 (3) , 1224-1231
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.171.3.1224
Abstract
Lymphocyte homeostasis is regulated by mechanisms that control lymphocyte proliferation and apoptosis. Activation-induced cell death is mediated by the expression of death ligands and receptors, which, when triggered, activate an apoptotic cascade. Bovine T cells transformed by the intracellular parasite Theileria parva proliferate in an uncontrolled manner and undergo clonal expansion. They constitutively express the death receptor Fas and its ligand, FasL but do not undergo apoptosis. Upon elimination of the parasite from the host cell by treatment with a theilericidal drug, cells become increasingly sensitive to Fas/FasL-induced apoptosis. In normal T cells, the sensitivity to death receptor killing is regulated by specific inhibitor proteins. We found that anti-apoptotic proteins such as cellular (c)-FLIP, which functions as a catalytically inactive form of caspase-8, and X-chromosome-linked inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) as well as c-IAP, which can block downstream executioner caspases, are constitutively expressed in T. parva-transformed T cells. Expression of these proteins is rapidly down-regulated upon parasite elimination. Antiapoptotic proteins of the Bcl-2 family such as Bcl-2 and Bcl-xL are also expressed but, in contrast to c-FLIP, c-IAP, and X-chromosome-linked IAP, do not appear to be tightly regulated by the presence of the parasite. Finally, we show that, in contrast to the situation in tumor cells, the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway is not essential for c-FLIP expression. Our findings indicate that by inducing the expression of antiapoptotic proteins, T. parva allows the host cell to escape destruction by homeostatic mechanisms that would normally be activated to limit the continuous expansion of a T cell population.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- NF-κB at the crossroads of life and deathNature Immunology, 2002
- MATURE T LYMPHOCYTE APOPTOSIS—Immune Regulation in a Dynamic and Unpredictable Antigenic EnvironmentAnnual Review of Immunology, 1999
- Regulation of Fas-Ligand Expression during Activation-induced Cell Death in T Lymphocytes via Nuclear Factor κBJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- RETRACTED: The Fas/Fas Ligand Pathway and Bcl-2 Regulate T Cell Responses to Model Self and Foreign AntigensImmunity, 1998
- Transcriptional Regulation of the Human FasL Promoter-Enhancer RegionPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Suppression of apoptosis in mammalian cells by NAIP and a related family of IAP genesNature, 1996
- Fas(CD95)/FasL interactions required for programmed cell death after T-cell activationNature, 1995
- Cell-autonomous Fas (CD95)/Fas-ligand interaction mediates activation-induced apoptosis in T-cell hybridomasNature, 1995
- Autocrine T-cell suicide mediated by APO-1/(Fas/CD95)Nature, 1995
- Induction of signal transduction pathways in lymphocytes infected by Theileria parvaParasitology Today, 1994