Essential role for caspase 8 in T-cell homeostasis and T-cell-mediated immunity |
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Authors: | Salmena Leonardo Lemmers Benedicte Hakem Anne Matysiak-Zablocki Elzbieta Murakami Kiichi Au P Y Billie Berry Donna M Tamblyn Laura Shehabeldin Amro Migon Eva Wakeham Andrew Bouchard Denis Yeh Wen Chen McGlade Jane C Ohashi Pamela S Hakem Razqallah |
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Affiliation: | The Advanced Medical Discovery Institute (AMDI), Ontario Cancer Institute, and Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario M5G 2C1, Canada. |
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Abstract: | Defects in death receptor-mediated apoptosis have been linked to cancer and autoimmune disease in humans. The in vivo role of caspase 8, a component of this pathway, has eluded analysis in postnatal tissues because of the lack of an appropriate animal model. Targeted disruption of caspase 8 is lethal in utero. We generated mice with a targeted caspase 8 mutation that is restricted to the T-cell lineage. Despite normal thymocyte development in the absence of caspase 8, we observed a marked decrease in the number of peripheral T-cells and impaired T-cell response ex vivo to activation stimuli. caspase 8 ablation protected thymocytes and activated T-cells from CD95 ligand but not anti-CD3-induced apoptosis, or apoptosis activated by agents that are known to act through the mitochondria. caspase 8 mutant mice were unable to mount an immune response to viral infection, indicating that caspase 8 deletion in T-cells leads to immunodeficiency. These findings identify an essential, cell-stage-specific role for caspase 8 in T-cell homeostasis and T-cell-mediated immunity. This is consistent with the recent identification of caspase 8 mutations in human immunodeficiency. |
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