NF-κB at the crossroads of life and death

M Karin, A Lin - Nature immunology, 2002 - nature.com
M Karin, A Lin
Nature immunology, 2002nature.com
The choice between life and death is one of the major events in regulation of the immune
system. T cells that specifically recognize viral or bacterial antigens are selected to survive
and proliferate in response to infection, whereas those that are self-reactive are eliminated
via apoptosis. Even the survival of alloreactive T cells requires their proper costimulation
and, when infection subsides, the activated T cells are eliminated. A major regulator of such
life or death decisions is the transcription factor NF-κB. However, NF-κB cannot function …
Abstract
The choice between life and death is one of the major events in regulation of the immune system. T cells that specifically recognize viral or bacterial antigens are selected to survive and proliferate in response to infection, whereas those that are self-reactive are eliminated via apoptosis. Even the survival of alloreactive T cells requires their proper costimulation and, when infection subsides, the activated T cells are eliminated. A major regulator of such life or death decisions is the transcription factor NF-κB. However, NF-κB cannot function alone. A variety of mechanisms exist to modulate its activity and thereby affect the ultimate outcome of a cell's fate.
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