Inhibition of T cell apoptosis by IFN-beta rapidly reverses nuclear translocation of protein kinase C-delta. |
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Authors: | D Scheel-Toellner D Pilling A N Akbar D Hardie G Lombardi M Salmon J M Lord |
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Affiliation: | MRC Centre for Immune Regulation, Division of Immunity and Infection, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, GB. |
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Abstract: | Type I interferons rescue activated human T cells from cytokine deprivation-induced apoptosis. Our data now show that IFN-beta also rapidly inhibits apoptotic signals induced through the Fas receptor (CD95) in human T cells. To identify upstream signaling elements that could be targets of IFN-beta, we have studied protein kinase C (PKC). PKC-delta is actively involved in the regulation of apoptosis and immunofluorescence staining revealed that early in apoptosis PKC-delta accumulated in the nucleus. Addition of IFN-beta to T cells already deprived of survival factors or treated with anti-Fas antibody caused a rapid retranslocation of PKC-delta away from the nucleus. Furthermore, the generation of a constitutively active catalytic fragment by cleavage of PKC-delta by caspase 3 occurred only after translocation of full-length PKC-delta to the nucleus. IFN-beta also inhibited caspase 3 and the proteolytic activation of PKC-delta. We conclude from these studies that nuclear translocation of PKC-delta is an early event in T cell apoptosis and that IFN-beta rapidly reverses this process. |
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