Cellular FLIP Long Form Augments Caspase Activity and Death of T Cells through Heterodimerization with and Activation of Caspase-8
Author(s) -
Austin Dohrman,
Jennifer Q. Russell,
Solange Cuenin,
Karen A. Fortner,
Jürg Tschopp,
Ralph C. Budd
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.175.1.311
Subject(s) - caspase , flip , microbiology and biotechnology , caspase 8 , fas receptor , nlrp1 , programmed cell death , caspase 10 , caspase 2 , effector , t cell , apoptosis , activator (genetics) , cytotoxic t cell , biology , caspase 3 , chemistry , receptor , biochemistry , immunology , immune system , in vitro
Caspase activity is required not only for the death of T cells, but also for their activation. A delicate balance of caspase activity is thus required during T cell activation at a level that will not drive cell death. How caspase activity is initiated and regulated during T cell activation is not known. One logical candidate for this process is cellular FLIP long form (c-FLIP(L)), because it can block caspase-8 recruitment after Fas (CD95) ligation as well as directly heterodimerize with and activate caspase-8. The current findings demonstrate that after T cell activation, caspase-8 and c-FLIP(L) associate in a complex enriched for active caspases. This occurs coincidently with the cleavage of two known caspase-8 substrates, c-FLIP(L) and receptor interacting protein 1. Caspase activity is higher in wild-type CD8(+) than CD4(+) effector T cells. Increased expression of c-FLIP(L) results in augmented caspase activity in resting and effector T cells to levels that provoke cell death, especially of the CD8 subset. c-FLIP(L) is thus not only an inhibitor of cell death by Fas, it can also act as a principal activator of caspases independently of Fas.
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