Dendritic cell apoptosis in the maintenance of immune tolerance
- PMID: 16497935
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1122545
Dendritic cell apoptosis in the maintenance of immune tolerance
Abstract
Apoptosis in the immune system is critical for maintaining self-tolerance and preventing autoimmunity. Nevertheless, inhibiting apoptosis in lymphocytes is not alone sufficient to break self-tolerance, suggesting the involvement of other cell types. We investigated whether apoptosis in dendritic cells (DCs) helps regulate self-tolerance by generating transgenic mice expressing the baculoviral caspase inhibitor, p35, in DCs (DC-p35). DC-p35 mice displayed defective DC apoptosis, resulting in their accumulation and, in turn, chronic lymphocyte activation and systemic autoimmune manifestations. The observation that a defect in DC apoptosis can independently lead to autoimmunity is consistent with a central role for these cells in maintaining immune self-tolerance.
Comment in
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Immunology. Foiled dendritic cell suicide may lead to autoimmunity.Science. 2006 Feb 24;311(5764):1086. doi: 10.1126/science.311.5764.1086a. Science. 2006. PMID: 16497897 No abstract available.
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