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CD95 co-stimulation blocks activation of naive T cells by inhibiting T cell receptor signaling.

The Journal of experimental medicine (2009-06-03)
Gudrun Strauss, Jonathan A Lindquist, Nathalie Arhel, Edward Felder, Sabine Karl, Tobias L Haas, Simone Fulda, Henning Walczak, Frank Kirchhoff, Klaus-Michael Debatin
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

CD95 is a multifunctional receptor that induces cell death or proliferation depending on the signal, cell type, and cellular context. Here, we describe a thus far unknown function of CD95 as a silencer of T cell activation. Naive human T cells triggered by antigen-presenting cells expressing a membrane-bound form of CD95 ligand (CD95L) or stimulated by anti-CD3 and -CD28 antibodies in the presence of recombinant CD95L had reduced activation and proliferation, whereas preactivated, CD95-sensitive T cells underwent apoptosis. Triggering of CD95 during T cell priming interfered with proximal T cell receptor signaling by inhibiting the recruitment of zeta-chain-associated protein of 70 kD, phospholipase-gamma, and protein kinase C- into lipid rafts, thereby preventing their mutual tyrosine protein phosphorylation. Subsequently, Ca(2+) mobilization and nuclear translocation of transcription factors NFAT, AP1, and NF-kappaB were strongly reduced, leading to impaired cytokine secretion. CD95-mediated inhibition of proliferation in naive T cells could not be reverted by the addition of exogenous interleukin-2 and T cells primed by CD95 co-stimulation remained partially unresponsive upon secondary T cell stimulation. HIV infection induced CD95L expression in primary human antigen-presenting cells, and thereby suppressed T cell activation, suggesting that CD95/CD95L-mediated silencing of T cell activation represents a novel mechanism of immune evasion.

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Marke
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Propidiumjodid, ≥94.0% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Propidiumjodid, ≥94% (HPLC)