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Cornelia S. Seitz, Rachel A. Freiberg, Kaede Hinata, Paul A. Khavari
Published in Volume 105, Issue 3
J Clin Invest. 2000; 105(3):253–260 doi:10.1172/JCI7630
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Figure 2

NF-κB subunit protects epithelial cells against Fas-induced apoptosis in vitro. Normal human keratinocytes were cotransduced with a retroviral vector of the wild-type human Fas protein along with vectors for p50, IκBαM, and lacZ normal control (NL). One day after double transduction, Fas signal transduction was triggered by the anti–Fas antibody CH-11 (1 μg/mL) and cellular morphology was analyzed by phase-contrast microscopy (bars = 10 μm). (ac) Morphology of (a) normal control, (b) p50[+], and (c) IκBαM[+] cells 7 hours after Fas activation. Note the rounded, shrunken, and detached morphology of IκBαM[+] and normal controls and the lack of such changes in p50[+] cells. Representative (d) TUNEL assay stains and (e) propidium iodide nuclear stains demonstrate apoptotic changes in cells with altered morphology; note positive nuclei in TUNEL staining as well as nuclear condensation and collapse evident in propidium iodide stained cells (arrows). (f) Quantitation of NF-κB effects on Fas-induced epithelial apoptosis in vitro. The percentage of apoptotic cells was determined by cell morphology, TUNEL, and nuclear stains. Time points analyzed were 0, 7, and 18 hours after Fas cross-linking with CH-11. Three independent transductions were analyzed at each time point; data shown are based on morphologic changes and are presented as ± SD between these 3 independent experiments. *P < 0.01 difference of p50 from IκBαM and normal controls.