4.7 Article

Combined deficiency of p50 and cRel in CD4+ T cells reveals an essential requirement for nuclear factor κB in regulating mature T cell survival and in vivo function

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 197, Issue 7, Pages 861-874

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1084/jem.20021610

Keywords

T lymphocytes; T cell receptor; cell death; NF-kappa B; transcription factor

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA74892-05A2, R01 CA074892] Funding Source: Medline

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Signaling pathways involved in regulating T cell proliferation and survival are not well understood. Here we have investigated a possible role of the nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB pathway in regulating mature T cell function by using CD4+ T cells from p50(-/-) cRel(-/-) mice, which exhibit virtually no inducible kappaB site binding activity. Studies with these mice indicate an essential role of T cell receptor (TCR)-induced NF-kappaB in regulating interleukin (IL)-2 expression, cell cycle entry, and survival of T cells. Our results further indicate that NF-kappaB regulates TCR-induced expression of antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family members. Strikingly, retroviral transduction of CD4(+) T cells with the NF-kappaB-inducing IkappaB kinase beta showed that NF-kappaB activation is not only necessary but also sufficient for T cell survival. In contrast, our results indicate a lack of involvement of NF-kappaB in both IL-2 and Akt-induced survival pathways. In vivo, p50(-/-) cRel(-/-) mice showed impaired superantigen-induced T cell responses as well as decreased numbers of effector/memory and regulatory CD4+ T cells. These findings provide the first demonstration of a role for NF-kappaB proteins in regulating T cell function in vivo and establish a critically important function of NF-kappaB in TCR-induced regulation of survival.

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