| Literature DB >> 22848207 |
Gabor Koncz1, Anne-Odile Hueber.
Abstract
Cell death receptors have crucial roles in the regulation of immune responses. Here we review recent in vivo data confirming that the Fas death receptor (TNFSR6) on B cells is important for the regulation of autoimmunity since the impairment of only Fas function on B cells results in uncontrolled autoantibody production and autoimmunity. Fas plays a role in the elimination of the non-specific and autoreactive B cells in germinal center, while during the selection of antigen-specific B cells different escape signals ensure the resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis. Antigen-specific survival such as BCR or MHCII signal or coreceptors (CD19) cooperating with BCR inhibits the formation of death inducing signaling complex. Antigen-specific survival can be reinforced by antigen-independent signals of IL-4 or CD40 overproducing the anti-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family proteins.Entities:
Keywords: cell death; immunity; survival signal
Year: 2012 PMID: 22848207 PMCID: PMC3404404 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2012.00207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Expression and function of Fas and sensitivity to Fas-induced cell death in different B cell populations.
| Cell type | Human | Mouse | |
|---|---|---|---|
| B1 cells | Expression | Negative, CD40 stimulation upregulates Fas expression and induces a biphasic profile (Huck et al., | Negative, LPS stimulation upregulates Fas expression (Mandik et al., |
| Function | Biphasic sensitivity (Kodama et al., | Hardly susceptible (Masuda et al., | |
| Mantle zone | Expression | Negative, inducible? (Leithauser et al., | No data |
| Function | Participation in autoantibody production (Qian et al., | No data | |
| Pre, pro, immature | Expression | Weak (Nishiuchi et al., | Weak, positive (Mandik et al., |
| Function | Resistant (Nishiuchi et al., | Resistant (Mandik et al., | |
| Blood | Expression | 5–25% positive (Miyawaki et al., | Partially positive, LPS induces (Wang et al., |
| Function | Resistant (Yoshino et al., | Resistant (Wang et al., | |
| Memory | Expression | Low positivity (Liu et al., | Low positivity (Tsunoda et al., |
| Function | Resistant (Liu et al., | Resistant (Tsunoda et al., | |
| Plasma cells | Expression | Tonsil: positive (Choe et al., | Weak positivity upon immunization in spleen (Smith et al., |
| Function | Leukemia or myeloma cells unclear results (Shima et al., | No data |
For germinal center cells, see the text.
Figure 1Four different types of T cell–B cell interaction can occur in the germinal center: (A) following antigen recognition the specific B cells express Fas and in time became capable of presenting antigen to antigen-specific T cells. Strong affinity B cells maintain their antigen specificity during somatic mutation and as a consequence the BCR transduces signals even during competition for the limited available antigen. The BCR-mediated survival signals compete with Fas-induced cell death. (B) The naive (bystander) B cells do not interact with activated, FasL-expressing T cells in the absence of presentation of the appropriate antigen. In this situation their Fas expression is also very limited. As mentioned above, these cells are not targets of Fas-induced cell death. (C) The low affinity B cells, and B cells which lost antigen-specificity because of somatic mutation, are first targets of Fas-mediated killing. Maintaining antigen presenting capacity, but losing antigen triggering in the competition for the antigen, these cells contact the T cells, but do not access the survival signal. This explains the elevated antibody level in lpr mice where the antigen non-specific B cells can survive. (D) Anergic B cells are the main targets of Fas-mediated killing; the antigen receptor signaling of anergic B cells is desensitized due to their permanent activation. This group can explain the enhanced autoantibody production observed in lpr mice.
Figure 2Survival signals rescuing Fas-induced apoptosis in B cells.
Detailed molecular mechanism of inhibition of Fas-induced cell killing.
| BCR | MHCII | CD19 | CD40 | IL-4 | FDC | CpG | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fas expression | Unchanged/increased ( | Not altered (Yoshino et al., | Not decreased (Barrington et al., | Upregulated (Garrone et al., | Unchanged/increased (Foote et al., | Upregulated (Tsunoda et al., | Decreased (Wang et al., |
| DISC level | Reduced (Catlett and Bishop, | Reduced caspase-8 activity (Catlett et al., | Reduced caspase-8 cleavage ( | Not changed Fadd association (Benson et al., | Reduced caspase-8 activity (van Eijk et al., | Reduced caspase-8 activity (Hancz et al., | |
| Mitochondria | Transient upregulation of Bcl-xl (Choe et al., | Upregulation of Bcl-2 (Mongini et al., | Bfl-1, A1, Bcl-xl upregulated (Lee et al., | Upregulated Bcl-xl (Wurster et al., | Bcl-2, Bcl-xl, Bax amount was unchanged (Schwarz et al., | ||
| Other | Upregulation of FAIM, which results in the increase of FLIP expression (Schneider et al., | Gadd45β upregulation (Zazzeroni et al., |
Bold font, human; normal font, mouse.
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