Functional complementation between FADD and RIP1 in embryos and lymphocytes
- PMID: 21368761
- PMCID: PMC3072026
- DOI: 10.1038/nature09878
Functional complementation between FADD and RIP1 in embryos and lymphocytes
Erratum in
- Nature. 2012 Mar 22;483(7390):498
Abstract
FADD is a common adaptor shared by several death receptors for signalling apoptosis through recruitment and activation of caspase 8 (refs 1-3). Death receptors are essential for immune homeostasis, but dispensable during embryogenesis. Surprisingly, Fadd(-/-) mice die in utero and conditional deletion of FADD leads to impaired lymphocyte proliferation. How FADD regulates embryogenesis and lymphocyte responses has been a long-standing enigma. FADD could directly bind to RIP1 (also known as RIPK1), a serine/threonine kinase that mediates both necrosis and NF-κB activation. Here we show that Fadd(-/-) embryos contain raised levels of RIP1 and exhibit massive necrosis. To investigate a potential in vivo functional interaction between RIP1 and FADD, null alleles of RIP1 were crossed into Fadd(-/-) mice. Notably, RIP1 deficiency allowed normal embryogenesis of Fadd(-/-) mice. Conversely, the developmental defect of Rip1(-/-) lymphocytes was partially corrected by FADD deletion. Furthermore, RIP1 deficiency fully restored normal proliferation in Fadd(-/-) T cells but not in Fadd(-/-) B cells. Fadd(-/-)Rip1(-/-) double-knockout T cells are resistant to death induced by Fas or TNF-α and show reduced NF-κB activity. Therefore, our data demonstrate an unexpected cell-type-specific interplay between FADD and RIP1, which is critical for the regulation of apoptosis and necrosis during embryogenesis and lymphocyte function.
Figures
Comment in
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Programmed cell death: Apoptosis meets necrosis.Nature. 2011 Mar 17;471(7338):310-2. doi: 10.1038/471310a. Nature. 2011. PMID: 21412328 No abstract available.
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Cell death: A killer puts a stop on necroptosis.Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2011 May;12(5):279. doi: 10.1038/nrm3101. Epub 2011 Mar 30. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2011. PMID: 21448226 No abstract available.
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- Yeh W-C, et al. FADD: essential for embryo development and signaling from some, but not all, inducers of apoptosis. Science. 1998;279:1954–1958. - PubMed
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