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. 1992 Sep 1;149(5):1583-92.

Activation-driven T cell death. II. Quantitative differences alone distinguish stimuli triggering nontransformed T cell proliferation or death

Affiliations
  • PMID: 1380534

Activation-driven T cell death. II. Quantitative differences alone distinguish stimuli triggering nontransformed T cell proliferation or death

D S Ucker et al. J Immunol. .

Abstract

Clonal deletion is the major mechanism by which T cell tolerance is achieved in vivo. The process of activation-driven cell death, originally characterized with T cell hybridomas, likely represents the mechanism of clonal deletion because it shares a number of properties with the in vivo process, especially the ability to be triggered in an Ag-specific manner, the cell-autonomous nature of the response, and its sensitivity to the drug cyclosporin A. We now have extended our analysis of activation-driven cell death to clonal populations of nontransformed T cells. Activation-driven cell death can be induced in nontransformed T lymphocytes by combinations of mitogenic stimuli. In particular, two mitogenic stimuli at high dose, one a lymphokine and the other delivered via the TCR or another activation structure, are required to induce activation-driven cell death. Activation-driven cell death is an active cell suicide process with attributes typical of physiological cell death, including early nuclear disintegration and a requirement for macromolecular synthesis, and is distinct from death by factor deprivation. Susceptibility to the induction of cell death by antigenic or activating stimulation is a common aspect of most T cells and is consistent with observations that clonal deletion can occur throughout T cell ontogeny. Most importantly, the alternative cellular responses of cell death and cell proliferation in nontransformed T cells appear to be triggered solely as a function of quantitative differences in the doses of identical stimuli. This can be viewed as a dose-dependent switch that determines cell fate. Developmental regulation of this switch may explain the processes of positive and negative selection during T cell ontogeny and also provide a mechanistic rationale for a strategy of selective anti-tumor therapy.

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