4.8 Article

FADD and caspase-8 control the outcome of autophagic signaling in proliferating T cells

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0808597105

Keywords

apoptosis; autophagy; caspases; FADD; necroptosis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [T32CA09054, T32A160573, R01A150506, R01 A163419]
  2. Arthritis National Research Foundation

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Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) and caspase-8 (casp8) are vital intermediaries in apoptotic signaling induced by tumor necrosis factor family ligands. Paradoxically, lymphocytes lacking FADD or casp8 fail to undergo normal clonal expansion following antigen receptor cross-linking and succumb to caspase-independent cell death upon activation. Here we show that T cells lacking FADD or casp8 activity are subject to hyperactive autophagic signaling and subvert a cellular survival mechanism into a potent death process. T cell autophagy, enhanced by mitogenic signaling, recruits casp8 through interaction with FADD:Atg5-Atg12 complexes. inhibition of autophagic signaling with 3-methyladenine, dominant-negative Vps34, or Atg7 shRNA rescued T cells expressing a dominant-negative FADD protein. The necroptosis inhibitor Nec-1, which blocks receptor interacting protein kinase 1 (RIP kinase 1), also completely rescued T cells lacking FADD or casp8 activity. Thus, while autophagy is necessary for rapid T cell proliferation, our findings suggest that FADD and casp8 form a feedback loop to limit autophagy and prevent this salvage pathway from inducing RIPK1-dependent necroptotic cell death. Thus, linkage of FADD and casp8 to autophagic signaling intermediates is essential for rapid T cell clonal expansion and may normally serve to promote caspase-dependent apoptosis under hyperautophagic conditions, thereby averting necrosis and inflammation in vivo.

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