Regulation of Activator Protein-1 and NF-κB in CD8+ T Cells Exposed To Peripheral Self-Antigens

  • Guerder S
  • Rincòn M
  • Schmitt-Verhulst A
17Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The transcriptional events that control T cell tolerance to peripheral self Ags are still unknown. In this study, we analyzed the regulation of AP-1- and NF-κB-mediated transcription during in vivo induction of tolerance to a self Ag expressed exclusively on hepatocytes. Naive CD8+Désiré (Des)+ T cells isolated from the Des TCR-transgenic mice that are specific for the H-2Kb class I Ag were transferred into Alb-Kb-transgenic mice that express the H-2Kb Ag on hepatocytes only. Tolerance develops in these mice. We found that the self-reactive CD8+Des+ T cells were transiently activated, then became unresponsive and were further deleted. In contrast to CD8+Des+ T cells activated in vivo with APCs, which express high AP-1 and high NF-κB transcriptional activity, the unresponsive CD8+Des+ T cells expressed no AP-1 and only weak NF-κB transcriptional activity. The differences in NF-κB transcriptional activity correlated with the generation of distinct NF-κB complexes. Indeed, in vivo primed T cells predominantly express p50/p50 and p65/p50 dimers, whereas these p50-containing complexes are barely detectable in tolerant T cells that express p65- and c-Rel-containing complexes. These observations suggest that fine regulation of NF-κB complex formation may determine T cell fate.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Guerder, S., Rincòn, M., & Schmitt-Verhulst, A.-M. (2001). Regulation of Activator Protein-1 and NF-κB in CD8+ T Cells Exposed To Peripheral Self-Antigens. The Journal of Immunology, 166(7), 4399–4407. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.166.7.4399

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free