Abstract
In the accepted model of T-cell activation, parallel signal-transduction pathways activate the transcription factors NF-κB, NFAT, and AP-1 to drive clonal expansion of T cells in response to Ag. Genome-wide transcriptional profiling following Ag-induced CD8+ T-cell activation in C57BL/6 mouse T cells revealed that genes regulated by NFAT were also reduced in the absence of NF-κB p50 and cRel subunits. Importantly, p50-/-cRel-/-CD8+ T cells had significantly diminished NFAT and AP-1 activation compared with WT or PKCθ-/- CD8+ T cells. Attenuated NFAT activation after TCR engagement was associated with reduced calcium influx, PLCγ and Zap70 activation. Interestingly, pharmacological bypass of PLCγ-regulated pathways largely rescued p50-/-cRel-/- T-cell proliferative defects. These results indicate a crucial and unexpected requirement for NF-κB p50 and cRel subunits in proximal TCR signaling and calcium responses. They further suggest that key defects in T cells in the absence of NF-κB pathway components may be due to impaired proximal T-cell signaling.
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Bronk, C. C., Yoder, S., Hopewell, E. L., Yang, S., Celis, E., Yu, X. Z., & Beg, A. A. (2014). NF-κB is crucial in proximal T-cell signaling for calcium influx and NFAT activation. European Journal of Immunology, 44(12), 3741–3746. https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.201444904
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