Critical regulation of CD4+ T cell survival and autoimmunity by beta-arrestin 1
- PMID: 17618287
- DOI: 10.1038/ni1489
Critical regulation of CD4+ T cell survival and autoimmunity by beta-arrestin 1
Abstract
CD4+ T cells are important in adaptive immunity, but their dysregulation can cause autoimmunity. Here we demonstrate that the multifunctional adaptor protein beta-arrestin 1 positively regulated naive and activated CD4+ T cell survival. We found enhanced expression of the proto-oncogene Bcl2 through beta-arrestin 1-dependent regulation of acetylation of histone H4 at the Bcl2 promoter. Mice deficient in the gene encoding beta-arrestin 1 (Arrb1) were much more resistant to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, whereas overexpression of Arrb1 increased susceptibility to this disease. CD4+ T cells from patients with multiple sclerosis had much higher Arrb1 expression, and 'knockdown' of Arrb1 by RNA-mediated interference in those cells increased apoptosis induced by cytokine withdrawal. Our data demonstrate that beta-arrestin 1 is critical for CD4+ T cell survival and is a factor in susceptibility to autoimmunity.
Comment in
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Arresting autoimmunity by blocking beta-arrestin 1.Nat Immunol. 2007 Aug;8(8):791-2. doi: 10.1038/ni0807-791. Nat Immunol. 2007. PMID: 17641656 No abstract available.
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