Literature DB >> 9683626

Splenic T lymphocytes die preferentially during heat-induced apoptosis: NuMA reorganization as a marker.

C Sodja1, D L Brown, P R Walker, N Chaly.   

Abstract

We are investigating nuclear events during apoptosis in mouse splenic lymphocytes cultured immediately after isolation (controls) or after heat treatment (42 degreesC, 30 minutes), and have found that hyperthermia increased the level of apoptosis to double that of spontaneous apoptosis in controls within 6 hours. Immunolabelling for Nuclear Mitotic Apparatus Protein (NuMA) suggested that splenocytes were responding heterogeneously to the heat treatment. Whereas all nuclei in controls and about half of nuclei in heat-treated samples showed the usual diffuse nucleoplasmic labelling, 40-60% of nuclei in heated samples also contained numerous bright spots. We then examined whether the heterogeneity in NuMA organization might be an indication of a differential response of B and T lymphocytes to hyperthermia, and whether the presence of NuMA spots is related to the apoptotic process. NuMA labelling of heated fractionated splenocyte populations showed that 90% of nuclei in T-enriched cultures (less than or equal to 4% IgG+ cells), but only 25% of nuclei in B-enriched samples (less than or equal to 80% IgG+ cells), contained spots. As well, 2 hours after heat treatment of unfractionated cultures, greater than or equal to 90% of nuclei that were accumulating DNA strand breaks, as detected by TUNEL, exhibited NuMA spots. These data indicate that cells with NuMA spots are targetted for, or have initiated, the death program. Since most T cells, but few or no B cells, were spotty after heating, we conclude further that hyperthermia induces apoptosis preferentially in splenic T lymphocytes. The observation that the proportion of T cells was, on average, threefold greater in control than in heated samples after 24 hours in culture reinforces this conclusion.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9683626     DOI: 10.1242/jcs.111.16.2305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.285


  3 in total

1.  Protective effects of zymosan on heat stress-induced immunosuppression and apoptosis in dairy cows and peripheral blood mononuclear cells.

Authors:  Yuhang Sun; Jin Liu; Gengping Ye; Fang Gan; Mohammed Hamid; Shengfa Liao; Kehe Huang
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2018-06-02       Impact factor: 3.667

2.  Pro-death signaling of cytoprotective heat shock factor 1: upregulation of NOXA leading to apoptosis in heat-sensitive cells.

Authors:  Patryk Janus; Agnieszka Toma-Jonik; Natalia Vydra; Katarzyna Mrowiec; Joanna Korfanty; Marek Chadalski; Piotr Widłak; Karolina Dudek; Anna Paszek; Marek Rusin; Joanna Polańska; Wiesława Widłak
Journal:  Cell Death Differ       Date:  2020-01-29       Impact factor: 15.828

3.  Biological Characteristics and Predictive Model of Biopsy-Proven Acute Rejection (BPAR) After Kidney Transplantation: Evidences of Multi-Omics Analysis.

Authors:  Qianguang Han; Xiang Zhang; Xiaohan Ren; Zhou Hang; Yu Yin; Zijie Wang; Hao Chen; Li Sun; Jun Tao; Zhijian Han; Ruoyun Tan; Min Gu; Xiaobing Ju
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 4.772

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.