Degradation of NF-κB in T Cells by Gangliosides Expressed on Renal Cell Carcinomas

  • Thornton M
  • Kudo D
  • Rayman P
  • et al.
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Abstract

T cells from cancer patients are often functionally impaired, which imposes a barrier to effective immunotherapy. Most pronounced are the alterations characterizing tumor-infiltrating T cells, which in renal cell carcinomas includes defective NF-κB activation and a heightened sensitivity to apoptosis. Coculture experiments revealed that renal tumor cell lines induced a time-dependent decrease in RelA(p65) and p50 protein levels within both Jurkat T cells and peripheral blood T lymphocytes that coincided with the onset of apoptosis. The degradation of RelA/p50 is critical for SK-RC-45-induced apoptosis because overexpression of RelA in Jurkat cells protects against cell death. The loss of RelA/p50 coincided with a decrease in expression of the NF-κB regulated antiapoptotic protein Bcl-xL at both the protein and mRNA level. The disappearance of RelA/p50 protein was mediated by a caspase-dependent pathway because pretreatment of T lymphocytes with a pan caspase inhibitor before coculture with SK-RC-45 blocked RelA and p50 degradation. SK-RC-45 gangliosides appear to mediate this degradative pathway, as blocking ganglioside synthesis in SK-RC-45 cells with the glucosylceramide synthase inhibitor, PPPP, protected T cells from tumor cell-induced RelA degradation and apoptosis. The ability of the Bcl-2 transgene to protect Jurkat cells from RelA degradation, caspase activation, and apoptosis implicates the mitochondria in these SK-RC-45 ganglioside-mediated effects.

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APA

Thornton, M. V., Kudo, D., Rayman, P., Horton, C., Molto, L., Cathcart, M. K., … Finke, J. H. (2004). Degradation of NF-κB in T Cells by Gangliosides Expressed on Renal Cell Carcinomas. The Journal of Immunology, 172(6), 3480–3490. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.172.6.3480

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