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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antigen-activated T cells of the
CD4
(+)CD8(-) phenotype are susceptible to antigen receptor-stimulated cell death. This form of apoptotic cell death has been shown to be dependent on the expression of the Fas (CD95) antigen and can occur via an autocrine mechanism involving the concomitant up-regulation of Fas and its ligand on activated T cells. Mutation in genes encoding Fas (Ipr) and the Fas ligand (gld) contribute to the development of an autoimmune syndrome similar to systemic lupus erythematosus in mice. These observations led to the suggestion that the Fas signaling pathway is an important regulator of immune responses in vivo. Here we evaluated the importance of the Fas pathway in regulating immune responses by male antigen-specific
CD4
(-)CD8(+) T cells. We found that the in vivo elimination of these activated cells was independent of Fas expression by these cells. However, the elimination of these activated cells was inhibited by the transgenic expression of
Bcl-2
, a protein that inhibits multiple forms of apoptotic cell death. The transgenic
Bcl-2
protein also inhibited the death of male antigen-activated cells following IL-2 deprivation. Cell death resulting from IL-2 deprivation occurred efficiently in male antigen-activated Fas- cells. We propose that the rapid deletion of male antigen-activated Fas- cells in vivo is due to limiting amounts of IL-2 that are available in the microenvironment of the activated cells at the peak of the response.
...
PMID:Fas (CD95)-independent regulation of immune responses by antigen-specific CD4-CD8+ T cells. 867 54
The effect of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infection on the programmed cell death of CD4+ lymphocytes was studied by using Jurkat cells stably expressing high levels of the
Bcl-2
protein (Jurkat-Bcl2) or control cells (Jurkat-P). Both Jurkat-Bcl2 and Jurkat-P cells exhibited surface
CD4
expression adequate to support HIV-1 infection. We observed no differences between HIV-1-infected Jurkat Bcl2 cells and control cells with respect to kinetics of virus replication, protein expression, and processing. Severe cytopathic effects, which were typical of acute HIV-1 infection and consisted of syncytium formation followed by single-cell lysis, were observed in both cell types. However, several lines of evidence, such as cell viability analysis by trypan blue dye exclusion, chromosomal DNA laddering, and morphologic analysis by acridine orange/ethidium bromide or Giemsa staining, indicated that HIV-1 did not induce a significant amount of programmed cell death in either cell type. These results suggest that apoptosis is at most a minor element in HIV-1-induced cytopathicity in Jurkat lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Effects of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection on programmed cell death in the presence or absence of Bcl-2. 867 40
Murine AIDS (MAIDS) induced by infection of C57BL/6 mice with a mixture of retroviruses known as LP-BM5 is characterized by lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, and T and B cell dysfunction. By labeling with bromodeoxyuridine in vivo, we found vigorous
CD4
T cell proliferation during the initial stages of infection, yet a loss in their ability to function both in vivo and in vitro. In addition, a significant fraction of the
CD4
T cell population in infected mice undergoes spontaneous apoptosis in vivo. Upon in vitro stimulation with anti-CD3 plus PMA, anergic
CD4
T cells from mice with MAIDS fail to progress through the cell cycle (G0/G1 arrest), and a fraction of the cells undergoes apoptosis. The addition of IL-2 along with TCR-mediated stimulation not only fails to rescue
CD4
T cells from apoptosis, but enhances activation-induced cell death. To further understand the regulation of the suicide pathway(s) of anergic
CD4
T cells vs the cytokine synthesis pathway(s) of normal
CD4
T cells, we evaluated their expression of
Bcl-2
protein. As infection progresses, the expression of
Bcl-2
among
CD4
T cells declines and drops further when
CD4
T cells are restimulated through the TCR in vitro. These results suggest that this
CD4
T cell immunodeficiency in MAIDS includes a TCR-induced program of activation-induced cell death and an uncoupling from cytokine synthesis pathways and proliferation of
CD4
T cells. The decline in
Bcl-2
expression may be in part responsible for this reprogramming.
...
PMID:TCR triggering of anergic CD4 T cells in murine AIDS induces apoptosis rather than cytokine synthesis and proliferation. 875 10
Positive selection of T cells begins with TCR alpha beta lo thymic progenitors. Here, we show that the most efficient TCRlo progenitors are c-kit+ with intermediate levels of
CD4
and CD8 (DPint). Positive selection of DPint TCRlo c-kit+ cells results in TCRmed CD69+ c-kit+ transitional intermediates that show increased TCRV beta frequencies to selecting superantigen (SAg) that are committed to the
CD4
or CD8 pathway. The cells on the c-kit+ maturation pathway maintain
Bcl-2
expression. Most DPint c-kit+ progenitors fail positive selection, and become DPhi c-kit- cells that lose
Bcl-2
expression. Some DPhi c-kit blast cells can be salvaged to produce mature single-positive (SP) cells. DPint c-kit+ maturation to SP cells can occur in <12 hr in vitro on thymic stromal monolayers.
...
PMID:The c-kit+ maturation pathway in mouse thymic T cell development: lineages and selection. 876 78
CD28 on T cells provides a potent costimulatory signal for T cell activation. Down-regulation of CD28 on peripheral T cells has been reported in certain clinical conditions, but full studies on the mechanism and biological significance have not been performed. Our extensive phenotype analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from SLE patients revealed that the absolute number of CD28+ T cells of both
CD4
and CD8 phenotypes was selectively decreased, while that of CD28- T cells was maintained. CD28+ T cells from SLE patients exhibited mostly normal proliferative responses to both CD28-dependent and -independent stimulations. In contrast, CD28- T cells were hyporesponsive to anti-CD3 stimulation in both SLE and normal controls. These results implied that the selective decrease of CD28+ T cells in SLE does not result from a hyporesponsiveness of CD28+ T cells. To investigate the reason for the selective loss of CD28+ T cells, we determined the appearance of apoptotic cells in culture with or without anti-CD3 stimulation. Apoptotic cells defined by merocyanine (MC)540 were gradually increased from 12 h to 24 h. Anti-CD3-induced apoptosis of CD28+ T cells was significantly accelerated in SLE, whereas apoptosis of CD28- T cells was hardly detected in both SLE and normal controls. Comparative analysis between CD28+ and CD28- T cells on CD95 (Fas) and
Bcl-2
expression, which are related to activation-induced cell death (AICD), did not show a major difference, although CTLA4, which has been demonstrated to transmit an apoptosis-inducing signal, was expressed only on CD28+ T cells. Our results suggest that CD28-mediated costimulation influences T cell susceptibility to AICD and may be involved in T cell lymphopenia in SLE.
...
PMID:Preferential elimination of CD28+ T cells in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and the relation with activation-induced apoptosis. 891 66
Immature
CD4
/CD8 double-positive (DP) thymocytes expressing self MHC-restricted TCR are positively selected in response to TCR signals to survive and differentiate into functionally competent
CD4
or CD8 single positive (SP) T cells. In contrast, DP precursors expressing autoreactive TCR are clonally deleted in response to TCR signals. We show here that in vitro TCR engagement of TCR(low) DP thymocytes rapidly triggers a variety of events considered to be hallmarks of positive selection in vivo. These include increased expression of CD5 and
Bcl-2
, termination of RAG-1 and pre-T(alpha) gene expression, and a switch in lck promoter usage. We also demonstrate that
CD4
- or CD28-mediated signals synergize with TCR signals to induce these outcomes. Finally, we show that the response of DP thymocytes to TCR engagement is selective in that clonal deletion,
CD4
/CD8 lineage commitment, and other events associated with maturation, such as changes in expression of Thy-1, HSA, MHC class I, and CD45-RB, were not induced. Thus, only subsets of maturational processes associated with positive selection in vivo were shown to be directly coupled to TCR signaling pathways at the DP stage. These observations support conclusions from in vivo systems suggesting that multiple, temporally separated TCR engagements are required to effect the entire spectrum of developmental changes associated with positive selection, and provide a conceptual and experimental framework for unraveling the complexity of positive selection.
...
PMID:TCR engagement of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes in vitro induces early aspects of positive selection, but not apoptosis. 897 76
Chimpanzees are one of the few species, along with humans, susceptible to persistent HIV-1 infection. However, HIV-infected chimpanzees do not exhibit the marked immune system alterations seen in humans and remain relatively resistant to AIDS. In humans, HIV infection leads to unresponsiveness of T cells in response to TCR stimulation, associated with increased T cell death by apoptosis. In an effort to understand some of the mechanisms used to limit lentivirus infection in African nonhuman primates, we compared apoptosis in infected humans vs chimpanzees in
CD4
and CD8 T cells in relation with the expression of
Bcl-2
and Fas molecules. The intensity of apoptosis in
CD4
and CD8 T cells from infected chimpanzees was very low, was not inducible by several TCR-dependent activators, and was comparable to that detected in noninfected chimpanzees. Moreover, CD45RO+ and HLA-DR+ subsets, which were shown to exhibit ex vivo a high propensity to undergo apoptosis in infected humans, were not modified in infected chimpanzees. Interestingly, in contrast to the situation found in infected humans, Fas ligation by agonistic Abs or recombinant human Fas ligand on
CD4
and CD8 T cells from infected chimpanzees did not induce apoptosis in these subsets even when
Bcl-2
was down-regulated. Finally, this resistance to apoptosis was associated with the predominance of CD3 T cells with a Th1 phenotype. Together these observations argue for a strong relationship among the absence of chronic immune stimulation in HIV-1-infected chimpanzees, the normal control of lymphocyte survival, and the resistance to disease progression.
...
PMID:Lack of chronic immune activation in HIV-infected chimpanzees correlates with the resistance of T cells to Fas/Apo-1 (CD95)-induced apoptosis and preservation of a T helper 1 phenotype. 905 36
Although much is known about the activation, proliferation, and function of
CD4
(+) T cells, little is known about how they survive as resting T cells in animals. Resting T cells have a half-life in animals of more than a week; however, when they are removed from animals and placed in tissue culture their half-life falls to approximately 24 h. In this paper, we show that the survival of resting T cells in vitro is promoted by two cytokines, interleukins 4 and 7 (IL-4, IL-7). They may do this in part by maintaining levels of survival-promoting proteins such as
Bcl-2
in the cells, because the levels of
Bcl-2
and Bcl-Xl in resting T cells fall rapidly after the cells are isolated from animals, and are maintained by culture in IL-4. Because the IL-4 receptor is known to signal through the JAK1 and JAK3/Stat6 pathway, we tested whether Stat6 was required for IL-4- dependent T cell survival. Surprisingly, we found that IL-4 rescued T cells from apoptosis in what appeared to be a Stat6-independent manner. These results demonstrate that the survival of resting T cells is an active process that can be affected by signals delivered by cytokines and also suggest that the IL-4 receptor on resting T cells may use a novel signaling pathway to facilitate T cell viability.
...
PMID:Interleukin 4 (IL-4) or IL-7 prevents the death of resting T cells: stat6 is probably not required for the effect of IL-4. 922 62
We have previously demonstrated that
CD4
cross-linking (CD4XL) results in apoptosis of CD4+ T cells and augmentation of Fas antigen (CD95, APO-1) expression in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Here we demonstrate that CD4XL mediated by both, anti-
CD4
monoclonal antibody (MoAb) or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) envelope protein gp120 reduces the expression of the proto-oncogene
Bcl-2
in CD4+ T cells, but not in CD8+ T cells, concurrently with the induction of CD4+ T cell-apoptosis. Additionally, the Bcl-2dim population expressed high levels of Fas antigen. Bax, an antagonist of
Bcl-2
, was brightly expressed even in the Bcl-2dim population. Addition of interleukin (IL)-2 rescued CD4+ T cells from CD4XL-induced
Bcl-2
downmodulation and apoptosis induction. These results support the hypothesis that
CD4
ligation by HIV-1 envelope protein in vivo in HIV-infected patients selectively reduces
Bcl-2
protein in CD4+ T lymphocytes, thereby facilitating Fas/Fas-ligand triggered apoptosis; furthermore the findings reported expand the rationale for use of IL-2 in HIV disease.
...
PMID:Modulation of Bcl-2 protein by CD4 cross-linking: a possible mechanism for lymphocyte apoptosis in human immunodeficiency virus infection and for rescue of apoptosis by interleukin-2. 922 75
Administration of glucocorticoids or exposure to ionizing radiation in vivo results in a rapid cell death of thymocytes. We report that murine small intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) are resistant to both steroid- and radiation-induced deletion. This is due to resistance to apoptosis, as evidenced by the absence of detectable apoptotic IEL nuclei in situ after in vivo glucocorticoid treatment. IEL express normal levels of glucocorticoid receptors and these receptors bind [3H]dexamethasone to equivalent levels as other lymphocyte populations. Thus, their survival is due to post-receptor signaling mechanisms. Many IEL express high levels of
Bcl-2
and that of these Bcl-2high IEL are largely TCR gamma delta +. Those IEL that do express high levels of
Bcl-2
are CD8 alpha + beta -
CD4
-. In addition, IEL express Bcl-x, another protein shown to be involved in the protection of cells from apoptotic signals. IEL represent the first lymphocyte population in vivo shown to have high levels of expression of both molecules, that otherwise occur only in activated lymphocytes in vitro. These data suggest that the Bcl-2+Bcl-x+ IEL are activated cells and not an effete population of cells necessarily destined to die. Also, the high levels of
Bcl-2
and Bcl-x in this in vivo activated population supports the in vitro correlate of protection from activation-induced cell death.
...
PMID:Elevated expression of Bcl-2 and Bcl-x by intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes: resistance to apoptosis by glucocorticoids and irradiation. 923 3
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