Type 1 IFN maintains the survival of anergic CD4+ T cells

G Lombardi, PJ Dunne, D Scheel-Toellner… - The Journal of …, 2000 - journals.aai.org
The Journal of Immunology, 2000journals.aai.org
Anergic T cells have immunoregulatory activity and can survive for extended periods in vivo.
It is unclear how anergic T cells escape from deletion, because both anergy and apoptosis
can occur after TCR ligation. Stimulation of human CD4+ T cell clones reactive to influenza
hemagglutinin peptides can occur in the absence of APCs when MHC class II-expressing,
activated T cells present peptide to each other. This T: T peptide presentation can induce
CD95-mediated apoptosis, while the cells that do not die are anergic. We found that the …
Abstract
Anergic T cells have immunoregulatory activity and can survive for extended periods in vivo. It is unclear how anergic T cells escape from deletion, because both anergy and apoptosis can occur after TCR ligation. Stimulation of human CD4+ T cell clones reactive to influenza hemagglutinin peptides can occur in the absence of APCs when MHC class II-expressing, activated T cells present peptide to each other. This T: T peptide presentation can induce CD95-mediated apoptosis, while the cells that do not die are anergic. We found that the death after peptide or anti-CD3 treatment of a panel of CD4+ T cell clones is blocked by IFN-β secreted by fibroblasts and also by IFN-α. This increases cell recovery after stimulation, which is not due to T cell proliferation. This mechanism for apoptosis inhibition rapidly stops protein kinase C-δ translocation from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, which is an early event in the death process. A central observation was that CD4+ T cells that are rescued from apoptosis after T: T presentation of peptide by IFN-αβ remain profoundly anergic to rechallenge with Ag-pulsed APCs. However, anergized cells retain the ability to respond to IL-2, showing that they are nonresponsive but functional. The prevention of peptide-induced apoptosis in activated T cells by IFN-αβ is a novel mechanism that may enable the survival and maintenance of anergic T cell populations after TCR engagement. This has important implications for the persistence of anergic T cells with the potential for immunoregulatory function in vivo.
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