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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Functional responses and apoptosis of CD25 (IL-2R alpha)-deficient T cells expressing a transgenic antigen receptor.

IL-2 was initially defined as a T lymphocyte growth factor, but recent studies have provided evidence that it may also play a role in regulating T cell differentiation, apoptosis, and tolerance. To examine the contribution of IL-2 to these processes, we have bred a class II-restricted TCR transgene into mice deficient in the alpha-chain of the IL-2R, CD25. We show that in response to Ag, T cells from these mice are unable to use IL-2 and, as a result, are less efficient at traversing the cell cycle, and proliferate less than wild-type cells. Furthermore, CD25 -/- T cells exhibit reduced survival in vitro, even in the presence of costimulatory signals. IL-4 and IL-15, a cytokine related to IL-2, enhance the survival and Ag-induced proliferation of CD25 -/- T cells. Activated CD25 -/- T cells are resistant to Fas-mediated activation-induced cell death (AICD), and this defect cannot be corrected by other cytokines. Therefore, IL-2 plays a unique role in regulating AICD, but has redundant roles in T cell survival and proliferation in vitro. The failure of AICD observed with CD25 -/- T cells may explain the unexpected observation that deficiency of IL-2 or of the alpha- or beta-chain of the IL-2R results not in immunodeficiency, but in autoimmune disease.[1]

References

  1. Functional responses and apoptosis of CD25 (IL-2R alpha)-deficient T cells expressing a transgenic antigen receptor. Van Parijs, L., Biuckians, A., Ibragimov, A., Alt, F.W., Willerford, D.M., Abbas, A.K. J. Immunol. (1997) [Pubmed]
 
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