Regulation of Fas ligand-induced apoptosis by TNF

B. D. Elzey, T. S. Griffith, J. M. Herndon, R. Barreiro, J. Tschopp, T. A. Ferguson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

60 Scopus citations

Abstract

Fas ligand (FasL, CD95L) expression helps control inflammatory reactions in immune privileged sites such as the eye. Cellular activation is normally required to render lymphoid cells sensitive to FasL-induced death; however, both activated and freshly isolated Fas+ lymphoid cells are efficiently killed in the eye. Thus, we examined factors that might regulate cell death in the eye. TNF levels rapidly increased in the eye after the injection of lymphoid cells, and these cells underwent apoptosis within 24 h. Coinjection of anti-TNF Ab with the lymphoid cells blocked this cell death. Furthermore, TNFR2-/- T cells did not undergo apoptosis in the eyes of normal mice, while normal and TNFR1-/- T cells were killed by apoptosis. In vitro, tnf enhanced the Fas-mediated apoptosis of unactivated T cells through decreased intracellular levels of FLIP and increased production of the pro-apoptotic molecule Bax. This effect was mediated through the TNFR2 receptor. In vivo, intracameral injection of normal or TNFR1-/- 2,4,6-trinitrophenyl-coupled T cells into normal mice induced immune deviation, but TNFR2-/- 2,4,6-trinitrophenyl-coupled T cells were ineffective. Collectively, our results provide evidence of a role for the p75 TNFR in cell death in that TNF signaling through TNFR2 sensitizes lymphoid cells for Fas-mediated apoptosis. We conclude that there is complicity between apoptosis and elements of the inflammatory response in controlling lymphocyte function in immune privileged sites.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)3049-3056
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume167
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 15 2001

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