The costimulation-regulated duration of PKB activation controls T cell longevity

J Song, S Salek-Ardakani, PR Rogers, M Cheng… - Nature …, 2004 - nature.com
J Song, S Salek-Ardakani, PR Rogers, M Cheng, L Van Parijs, M Croft
Nature immunology, 2004nature.com
A brief antigenic stimulus can promote T cell proliferation, but the duration and nature of
intracellular signals required for survival are unclear. Here we show that in the absence of
OX40 costimulation, antigen-activated CD4+ cells are short-lived because the activity of
protein kinase B (PKB; also known as Akt) is not maintained over time. Activated T cells that
express a dominant-negative variant of PKB also undergo apoptosis, reproducing the OX40-
deficient phenotype. In contrast, an active form of PKB prevents downregulation of …
Abstract
A brief antigenic stimulus can promote T cell proliferation, but the duration and nature of intracellular signals required for survival are unclear. Here we show that in the absence of OX40 costimulation, antigen-activated CD4+ cells are short-lived because the activity of protein kinase B (PKB; also known as Akt) is not maintained over time. Activated T cells that express a dominant-negative variant of PKB also undergo apoptosis, reproducing the OX40-deficient phenotype. In contrast, an active form of PKB prevents downregulation of antiapoptotic proteins in OX40-deficient T cells, rescues antigen-induced cell survival in vivo, and controls inflammation in recall responses. Thus, sustained and periodic PKB signaling has an integral role in regulating T cell longevity.
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