Publication | Open Access
NF‐κB is crucial in proximal T‐cell signaling for calcium influx and NFAT activation
12
Citations
16
References
2014
Year
Proximal T‐cellImmunologyImmune RegulationCrel SubunitsCellular PhysiologyImmune DysregulationInflammationTranscriptional RegulationCalcium InfluxSignaling PathwayCell RegulationCell SignalingMolecular SignalingMolecular PhysiologyNfat ActivationImmune SurveillanceCell BiologySignal TransductionImmune Cell DevelopmentPhysiologyCellular Immune ResponseAccepted ModelMedicineCell DevelopmentNf-κb P50
In the accepted model of T-cell activation, parallel signal-transduction pathways activate the transcription factors NF-κB, NFAT, and AP-1 to drive clonal expansion of T cells in response to Ag. Genome-wide transcriptional profiling following Ag-induced CD8(+) T-cell activation in C57BL/6 mouse T cells revealed that genes regulated by NFAT were also reduced in the absence of NF-κB p50 and cRel subunits. Importantly, p50(-/-) cRel(-/-) CD8(+) T cells had significantly diminished NFAT and AP-1 activation compared with WT or PKCθ(-/-) CD8(+) T cells. Attenuated NFAT activation after TCR engagement was associated with reduced calcium influx, PLCγ and Zap70 activation. Interestingly, pharmacological bypass of PLCγ-regulated pathways largely rescued p50(-/-) cRel(-/-) T-cell proliferative defects. These results indicate a crucial and unexpected requirement for NF-κB p50 and cRel subunits in proximal TCR signaling and calcium responses. They further suggest that key defects in T cells in the absence of NF-κB pathway components may be due to impaired proximal T-cell signaling.
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