| Literature DB >> 29326701 |
Yifan Zhan1,2,3, Emma M Carrington1,2, Yuxia Zhang3, Susanne Heinzel1,2, Andrew M Lew1,2,4.
Abstract
T cells are pivotal in immunity and immunopathology. After activation, T cells undergo a clonal expansion and differentiation followed by a contraction phase, once the pathogen has been cleared. Cell survival and cell death are critical for controlling the numbers of naïve T cells, effector, and memory T cells. While naïve T cell survival has been studied for a long time, more effort has gone into understanding the survival and death of activated T cells. Despite this effort, there is still much to be learnt about T cell survival, as T cells transition from naïve to effector to memory. One key advance is the development of inhibitors that may allow the temporal study of survival mechanisms operating in these distinct cell states. Naïve T cells were highly reliant on BCL-2 and sensitive to BCL-2 inhibition. Activated T cells are remarkably different in their regulation of apoptosis by pro- and antiapoptotic members of the BCL-2 family, rendering them differentially sensitive to antagonists blocking the function of one or more members of this family. Recent progress in understanding other programmed cell death mechanisms, especially necroptosis, suggests a unique role for alternative pathways in regulating death of activated T cells. Furthermore, we highlight a mechanism of epigenetic regulation of cell survival unique to activated T cells. Together, we present an update of our current understanding of the survival requirement of activated T cells.Entities:
Keywords: activated T cells; apoptosis; autoimmunity; epigenetics; necroptosis; treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 29326701 PMCID: PMC5733345 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Principal pathways of cell death. Apoptosis comprises of the intrinsic and extrinsic pathway. In the intrinsic pathway, cells sense stress signals, leading to upregulation and activation of BH3 proteins. When antiapoptotic molecules that normally bind and keep BH3 proteins and/or BAX/BAK in check are displaced, BH3 proteins will trigger activation of BAX and BAK. BAX/BAK then mediate cytochrome c release from the mitochondrial outer membrane to the cytosol, activating Caspase-9 and downstream caspases leading to cell demise. In the extrinsic pathway, extracellular ligands engage cell death receptors, leading to formation of the death-inducing signaling complex (DISC) with the adaptor protein Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) and pro-caspase 8, leading to activation of caspase 8 and subsequent activation of effector caspases and apoptosis. In this pathway, c-FLIP acts as a negative regulator. c-FLIP is structurally highly similar to procaspase-8 but lacks catalytic activity, thus outcompetes caspase 8 binding blunting the death-inducing signal. When extrinsic apoptosis in inhibited (Caspase 8 deficiency, caspase inhibition, and high c-FLIP expression), engagement of death ligand can initiate necroptosis that involves activation of the necroptosome comprising RIPK1, RIPK3, and mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL). Pytoptosis is a type of cell death initiated from activation of several Caspases that cleave IL-1β and IL-18. A downstream molecule Gasdermin is critical for cell death by pyroptosis. Autophagy promotes proteolytic degradation of mitochondria and other cytosolic components at the lysosome. It can promote survival or diminish survival depending on degraded molecules. BCL-2 family members with antiapoptotic and proapoptotic molecules can interact with upstream autophagy signaling molecules.
Figure 2Putative roles of EZH2 and PRC2 complex in regulation of cell death of activated T cells. The polycomb repressive complex (PRC) contains EZH1/2, SUZ12, and EED. EZH2 deficiency in T-cell lineage does not affect normal development of CD4 and CD8 T cells. However, EZH2-deficient T cells display enhanced Th1 differentiation and enhanced cell death upon activation. EZH2-deficient T cells also have enhanced mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) expression upon TCR stimulation.
Survival requirement of T cells at a glance.
| Death pathways | Naïve T cells | Activated T cells | |
|---|---|---|---|
| BCL-2 regulated apoptosis (intrinsic) | BCL-2++++ MCl-1++ High expression of BCL-2 | MCL-1+++ A1+ BCL-2++ (CD8 memory) High expression of MCL-1, A1, BCL-xL | |
| Bim+++ | Bim+++ Puma+, NOXA+, BID+ (prominent at contraction phase) | ||
| Death receptor-regulated apoptosis (extrinsic) | +/− | ++ (prominent at persistent antigen stimulation) | |
| Necroptosis | −/+ | ++ (when Caspase 8 disabled) (mainly expansion phase) | |
| Low mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) expression | High MLKL expression | ||
| Pyroptosis | +/− | HIV-infected CD4 | |
| Autophagy | +/− | ++ | +++ |
++++ > +++ > ++ > + >—illustrating the degree of dependence by T cells on the indicated molecules or pathways.