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1.
Macrophage death is an important feature of atherosclerosis, but the cellular mechanism for this process is largely unknown. There is increasing interest in cellular free cholesterol (FC) excess as an inducer of lesional macrophage death because macrophages accumulate large amounts of FC in vivo, and FC loading of macrophages in culture causes cell death. In this study, a cell culture model was used to explore the cellular mechanisms involved in the initial stages of FC-induced macrophage death. After 9 h of FC loading, some of the macrophages exhibited externalization of phosphatidylserine and DNA fragmentation, indicative of an apoptotic mechanism. Incubation of the cells with Z-DEVD-fluoromethylketone blocked these events, indicating dependence upon effector caspases. Macrophages from mice with mutations in either Fas or Fas ligand (FasL) demonstrated substantial resistance to FC-induced apoptosis, and FC-induced death in wild-type macrophages was blocked by an anti-FasL antibody. FC loading had no effect on the expression of cell-surface Fas but caused a small yet reproducible increase in cell-surface FasL. To determine the physiological significance of this finding, unloaded and FC-loaded Fas-deficient macrophages, which can only present FasL, were compared for their ability to induce apoptosis in secondarily added Fas-bearing macrophages. The FC-loaded macrophages were much more potent inducers of apoptosis than the unloaded macrophages, and this effect was almost completely blocked by an inhibitory anti-FasL antibody. In summary, during the early stages of FC loading of macrophages, a fraction of cells exhibited biochemical changes that are indicative of apoptosis. An important part of this event is FC-induced activation of FasL that leads to Fas-mediated apoptosis. In light of recent in vivo findings that show that apoptotic macrophages in atherosclerotic lesions express both Fas and FasL, we present a cellular model of Fas-mediated death in lesional foam cells.  相似文献   

2.
Fas/Fas ligand system triggers apoptosis in many cell types. Bcl-XL overexpresion antagonizes Fas/Fas ligand-mediated cell death. The mechanism by which Bcl-XL influences Fas-mediated cell death is unclear. We have found that microtubule-damaging drugs (e.g. Paclitaxel) induce apoptosis in a Fas/FasL-dependent manner. Inhibition of Fas/FasL pathway by anti-FasL antibody, mutant Fas or a dominant negative FADD blocks paclitaxel-induced apoptosis. Paclitaxel induced apoptosis through activation of both caspase-8 and caspase-3. Overexpression of Bcl-XL leads to inhibition of paclitaxel-induced FasL expression and apoptosis. Bcl-XL prevents the nuclear translocation of NFAT (nuclear factor of activated T lymphocytes) by inhibiting the activation of calcineurin, a calcium-dependent phosphatase that must dephosphorylate NFAT for it to move to the nucleus. The loop domain in Bcl-XL can suppress the anti-apoptotic function of Bcl-XL and may be a target for regulatory post-translational modifications. Upon phosphorylation, Bcl-XL loses its ability to bind with calcineurin. Without NFAT nuclear translocation, the FasL gene is not transcribed. Thus, paclitaxel and other drugs that disturb microtubule function kill cells, at least in part, through the induction of FasL, and Bcl-XL-mediated resistance to these agents is related to failure to induce FasL expression.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of capsular polysaccharides, galactoxylomannan (GalXM) and glucuronoxylomannan (GXM), from acapsular (GXM negative) and encapsulate strains of Cryptococcus neoformans were investigated in RAW 264.7 and peritoneal macrophages. Here, we demonstrate that GalXM and GXM induced different cytokines profiles in RAW 264.7 macrophages. GalXM induced production of TNF-alpha, NO and iNOS expression, while GXM predominantly induced TGF-beta secretion. Both GalXM and GXM induced early morphological changes identified as autophagy and late macrophages apoptosis mediated by Fas/FasL interaction, a previously unidentified mechanism of virulence. GalXM was more potent than GXM at induction of Fas/FasL expression and apoptosis on macrophages in vitro and in vivo. These findings uncover a mechanism by which capsular polysaccharides from C. neoformans might compromise host immune responses.  相似文献   

4.
Apoptosis has been proposed to mediate CD4+ T-cell depletion in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. Interaction of Fas ligand (FasL) with Fas (CD95) results in lymphocyte apoptosis, and increased susceptibility to Fas-mediated apoptosis has been demonstrated in lymphocytes from HIV-infected individuals. Cells undergoing apoptosis in lymph nodes from HIV-infected individuals do not harbor virus, and therefore a bystander effect has been postulated to mediate apoptosis of uninfected cells. These data raise the possibility that antigen-presenting cells are a source of FasL and that HIV infection of cells such as macrophages may induce or increase FasL expression. In this report, we demonstrate that HIV infection of monocytic cells not only increases the surface expression of Fas but also results in the de novo expression of FasL. Interference with the FasL-Fas interaction by anti-Fas blocking antibodies abrogates HIV-induced apoptosis of monocytic cells. Human monocyte-derived macrophages from healthy donors contain detectable FasL mRNA, which is further upregulated following HIV infection with monocytotropic strains. HIV-infected human macrophages result in the apoptotic death of Jurkat T cells and peripheral blood T lymphocytes. Interruption of the FasL-Fas interaction abrogates the HIV-infected macrophage-dependent death of T lymphocytes. These results provide evidence that human macrophages can provide a source of FasL, especially following HIV infection, and can thus participate in lymphocyte depletion in HIV-infected individuals.  相似文献   

5.
A20 was originally characterized as a TNF-inducible gene in human umbilical vein endothelial cells. As an NF-kappaB target gene, A20 is also induced in many other cell types by a wide range of stimuli. Expression of A20 has been shown to protect from TNF-induced apoptosis and also functions via a negative-feedback loop to block NF-kappaB activation induced by TNF and other stimuli. To date, there are no reports on whether A20 can protect OxLDL-induced apoptosis in macrophages. For the first time we report that A20 expression blocks OxLDL-mediated cell toxicity and apoptosis. OxLDL induced the expression of Fas and FasL, and the subsequent caspase-8 cleavage and treatment with a neutralizing ZB4 anti-Fas antibody blocked apoptosis induced by OxLDL. Expression of dominant negative FADD efficiently prevented OxLDL-induced apoptosis and caspase-8 activation. A20 expression significantly attenuated the increased expression of Fas and FasL, and Fas-mediated apoptosis. These findings suggest that A20-mediated protection from OxLDL may occur at the level of Fas/FADD-caspase-8 and be FasL dependent. Treatment of RAW264.7 cells with OxLDL induces a series of time-dependent events, including the release of cytochrome c, Smac and Omi from the mitochondria to the cytosol, activation of caspase-9, -6, -2, and -3, which are blocked by A20 expression. No cleaved form of Bid was detected, even treatment with OxLDL for 48 h. Expression of dominant negative FADD also efficiently prevented OxLDL-induced the above apoptotic events. The release of cyto c, Smac and Omi from mitochondria to cytosol, activated by OxLDL treatment, and the activation of caspase-9 may not be a downstream event of caspase-8-mediated Bid cleavage. Therefore, the protective effect of A20 on mitochondrial apoptotic pathway activated by OxLDL may be dependent on FADD. A20 expression reversed OxLDL-mediated G(0)/G(1) stage arrest by maintaining the expression of cyclin B1, cyclin D1, and cyclin E, and p21 and p73. Thus, A20 expression blocks OxLDL-mediated apoptosis in murine RAW264.7 macrophages through disrupting Fas/FasL-dependent activation of caspase-8 and the mitochondria pathway.  相似文献   

6.
Lewis lung carcinoma (3LL) cells were constitutively resistant to Fas-mediated apoptosis, but overexpression of Fas on 3LL cells allowed Fas-mediated apoptosis after crosslinking with agonist anti-Fas antibody (Jo2) in vitro. Surprisingly, Fas-overexpressing 3LL cells showed enhanced in vivo tumor progression, whereas no promotion of in vivo tumor growth was observed for dominant negative (DN) Fas-overexpressing 3LL transfectants in which the cytoplasmic death domain was deleted. In addition, the promotion of in vivo tumor growth by Fas-overexpression was reduced in gld (FasL-mutation) mice compared to normal mice. These data indicate that intact Fas/FasL cell signaling is required for the promotion of in vivo tumor growth by Fas overexpression in 3LL cells. In contrast to the efficient Fas-mediated killing induced in vitro by crosslinking with anti-Fas antibody, Fas-overexpressing 3LL cells were resistant in vitro to Fas-mediated apoptosis by activated T cells or transient FasL transfection. These data suggest that agonist anti-Fas antibody and natural FasL can transmit qualitatively different signals, and crosslinking of Fas with natural FasL on 3LL cells does not deliver the expected death signal. Thus, our results demonstrate that in some cases overexpression of Fas can result in a survival advantage for tumor cells in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Fas-mediated apoptosis plays an important role in normal tissue homeostasis, and disruption of this death pathway contributes to many human diseases. Induction of apoptosis via Fas activation has been associated with reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and down-regulation of FLICE inhibitory protein (FLIP); however, the relationship between these two events and their role in Fas-mediated apoptosis are unclear. We show herein that ROS are required for FLIP down-regulation and apoptosis induction by Fas ligand (FasL) in primary lung epithelial cells. ROS mediate the down-regulation of FLIP by ubiquitination and subsequent degradation by proteasome. Inhibition of ROS by antioxidants or by ectopic expression of ROS-scavenging enzymes glutathione peroxidase and superoxide dismutase effectively inhibited FLIP down-regulation and apoptosis induction by FasL. Hydrogen peroxide is a primary oxidative species responsible for FLIP down-regulation, whereas superoxide serves as a source of peroxide and a scavenger of NO, which positively regulates FLIP via S-nitrosylation. NADPH oxidase is a key source of ROS generation induced by FasL, and its inhibition by dominant-negative Rac1 expression or by chemical inhibitor decreased the cell death response to FasL. Taken together, our results indicate a novel pathway of FLIP regulation by an interactive network of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species that provides a key mechanism of apoptosis regulation in Fas-induced cell death and related apoptosis disorders.  相似文献   

8.
Fas (CD95/Apo-1) exists both in membrane-bound and in biologically active soluble (s) forms. Ligation of membrane-expressed Fas can induce apoptosis, and Fas-mediated signaling seems to be involved in T-cell-induced apoptosis of human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) blasts. The local release of sFas by AML blasts may then function as a protective mechanism by competing with membrane-bound Fas for binding sites on the common Fas ligand (FasL). sFas was released by AML blasts during in vitro culture, and this release was modulated by several cytokines that can be secreted by activated T cells. Increased levels of sFas could be detected during in vitro activation of T cells in the presence of native AML accessory cells, and this was observed both for (i) mitogenic activation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell clones derived from acute leukemia patients with therapy-induced leukopenia and (ii) allostimulated activation of T cells derived from normal donors. However, local in vivo levels of sFas will also be influenced by variations in systemic levels. High serum levels of sFas were detected in acute leukemia patients during chemotherapy-induced cytopenia, but these levels decreased during complicating bacterial infections. In contrast, serum levels of sFasL were normal in leukopenic patients. The present results support the hypothesis that local release of sFas can function as a protective mechanism against AML-reactive T cells, but the effects of this local release are, in addition, modulated by variations in systemic levels of sFas (but not sFasL). Received: 9 March 2000 / Accepted: 25 May 2000  相似文献   

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12.
Recent studies suggest that Fas expression on pancreatic beta cells may be important in the development of autoimmune diabetes in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse. To address this, pancreatic islets from NOD mice were analyzed by flow cytometry to directly identify which cells express Fas and Fas ligand (FasL) ex vivo and after in vitro culture with cytokines. Fas expression was not detected on beta cells isolated from young (35 days) NOD mice. In vitro, incubation of NOD mouse islets with both IL-1 and IFN-gamma was required to achieve sufficient Fas expression and sensitivity for islets to be susceptible to lysis by soluble FasL. In islets isolated from older (>/=125 days) NOD mice, Fas expression was detected on a limited number of beta cells (1-5%). FasL was not detected on beta cells from either NOD or Fas-deficient MRLlpr/lpr islets. Also, both NOD and MRLlpr/lpr islets were equally susceptible to cytokine-induced cell death. This eliminates the possibility that cytokine-treated murine islet cells commit "suicide" due to simultaneous expression of Fas and FasL. Last, we show that NO is not required for cytokine-induced Fas expression and Fas-mediated apoptosis of islet cells. These findings indicate that beta cells can be killed by Fas-dependent cytotoxicity; however, our results raise further doubts about the clinical significance of Fas-mediated beta cell destruction because few Fas-positive cells were isolated immediately before the development of diabetes.  相似文献   

13.
One proposed mechanism of tumour escape from immune surveillance is tumour up-regulation of the cell surface ligand FasL, which can lead to apoptosis of Fas receptor (Fas) positive lymphocytes. Based upon this 'counterattack', we have developed a mathematical model involving tumour cell-lymphocyte interaction, cell surface expression of Fas/FasL, and their secreted soluble forms. The model predicts that (a) the production of soluble forms of Fas and FasL will lead to the down-regulation of the immune response; (b) matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inactivation should lead to increased membrane FasL and result in a higher rate of Fas-mediated apoptosis for lymphocytes than for tumour cells. Recent studies on cancer patients lend support for these predictions. The clinical implications are two-fold. Firstly, the use of broad spectrum MMP inhibitors as anti-angiogenic agents may be compromised by their adverse effect on tumour FasL up-regulation. Also, Fas/FasL interactions may have an impact on the outcome of numerous ongoing immunotherapeutic trials since the final common pathway of all these approaches is the transduction of death signals within the tumour cell.  相似文献   

14.
Activated macrophages direct apoptosis and suppress mitosis of mesangial cells   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
During inflammation in the glomerulus, the complement of resident myofibroblast-like mesangial cells is regulated by mitosis and apoptosis, but the cellular mechanisms controlling the size of mesangial cell populations have remained obscure. Prompted by studies of development, we sought evidence that macrophages regulate mesangial cell number. Rat bone marrow-derived macrophages primed with IFN-gamma then further activated in coculture with LPS or TNF-alpha elicited a 10-fold induction of rat mesangial cell apoptosis and complete suppression of mitosis, effects inhibitable by the NO synthase inhibitors L-monomethyl arginine and L-N(6)-(1-iminoethyl) lysine dihydrochloride. Complete dependence upon macrophage-derived NO was observed in comparable experiments employing activated bone marrow macrophages from wild-type and NO synthase 2(-/-) mice. Nevertheless, when mesangial cells were primed with IFN-gamma plus TNF-alpha, increased induction by activated macrophages of mesangial apoptosis exhibited a NO-independent element. The use of gld/gld macrophages excluded a role for Fas ligand in this residual kill, despite increased expression of Fas and increased susceptibility to soluble Fas ligand exhibited by cytokine-primed mesangial cells. Finally, activated macrophages isolated from the glomeruli of rats with nephrotoxic nephritis also induced apoptosis and suppressed mitosis in mesangial cells by an L-monomethyl arginine-inhibitable mechanism. These data demonstrate that activated macrophages, via the release of NO and other mediators, regulate mesangial cell populations in vitro and may therefore control the mesangial cell complement at inflamed sites.  相似文献   

15.
A functional immune system not only requires rapid expansion of antigenic specific T cells, but also requires efficient deletion of clonally expanded T cells to avoid accumulation of T cells. Fas/Fas ligand (FasL)-mediated apoptosis plays a critical role in the deletion of activated peripheral T cells, which is clearly demonstrated by superantigen-induced expansion and subsequent deletion of T cells. In this study, we show that in the absence of protein kinase C-theta (PKC-theta), superantigen (staphylococcal enterotoxin B)-induced deletion of Vbeta8(+) CD4(+) T cells was defective in PKC-theta(-/-) mice. In response to staphylococcal enterotoxin B challenge, up-regulation of FasL, but not Fas, was significantly reduced in PKC-theta(-/-) mice. PKC-theta is thus required for maximum up-regulation of FasL in vivo. We further show that stimulation of FasL expression depends on PKC-theta-mediated activation of NF-AT pathway. In addition, PKC-theta(-/-) T cells displayed resistance to Fas-mediated apoptosis as well as activation-induced cell death (AICD). In the absence of PKC-theta, Fas-induced activation of apoptotic molecules such as caspase-8, caspase-3, and Bid was not efficient. However, AICD as well as Fas-mediated apoptosis of PKC-theta(-/-) T cells were restored in the presence of high concentration of IL-2, a critical factor required for potentiating T cells for AICD. PKC-theta is thus required for promoting FasL expression and for potentiating Fas-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

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17.
Expression of adenovirus (Ad) serotype 2 or 5 (Ad2/5) E1A or human papillomavirus (HPV)16 E7 reportedly sensitizes cells to lysis by macrophages. Macrophages possess several mechanisms to kill tumor cells including TNF-alpha, NO, reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI), and Fas ligand (FasL). E1A sensitizes cells to apoptosis by TNF-alpha, and macrophages kill E1A-expressing cells, in part through the elaboration of TNF-alpha. However, E1A also up-regulates the expression of 70-kDa heat shock protein, a protein that inhibits killing by TNF-alpha and NO, thereby protecting cells from lysis by macrophages. Unlike E1A, E7 does not sensitize cells to killing by TNF-alpha, and the effector mechanism(s) used by macrophages to kill E7-expressing cells remain undefined. The purpose of this study was to further define the capacity of and the effector mechanisms used by macrophages to kill tumor cells that express Ad5 E1A or HPV16 E7. We found that Ad5 E1A, but not HPV16 E7, sensitized tumor cells to lysis by macrophages. Using macrophages derived from mice unable to make TNF-alpha, NO, ROI, or FasL, we determined that macrophages used NO, and to a lesser extent TNF-alpha, but not FasL or ROI, to kill E1A-expressing cells. Through the use of S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine, which releases NO upon exposure to an aqueous environment, E1A was shown to directly sensitize tumor cells to NO-induced death. E1A sensitized tumor cells to lysis by macrophages despite up-regulating the expression of 70-kDa heat shock protein. In summary, E1A, but not E7, sensitized tumor cells to lysis by macrophages. Macrophages killed E1A-expressing cells through NO- and TNF-alpha-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

18.
19.
FasL and TRAIL are apoptotic ligands of the TNF-like cytokines family, acting via activation of the transmembrane death domain containing receptors Fas for FasL, and DR4 or DR5 for TRAIL. A glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked TRAIL receptor called DcR1 behaves as a decoy receptor inhibiting TRAIL-mediated cell death in several cellular systems. We engineered and stably expressed a chimeric GPI-linked Fas receptor (Fas-GPI) in T-lymphocyte cell lines constitutively expressing functional transmembrane Fas. Surprisingly, despite lacking the death domain region of functional Fas, Fas-GPI was able to significantly increase Fas-mediated cell death triggered by membrane bound or soluble FasL, whereas engagement of Fas-GPI alone did not trigger apoptosis. This potentiating effect, but not transmembrane Fas activation, was selectively inhibited by protein kinase C activation with phorbol esters, demonstrating that Fas-GPI activated a specific synergistic signal transduction pathway. Fas-GPI and transmembrane Fas were localized in distinct membrane compartments, since Fas-GPI, but not transmembrane Fas, was found in the glycolipid-rich membrane microdomains. These results suggest that apoptosis induced by members of this ligand/receptors family may be differentially modulated through other and parallel signalling pathways.  相似文献   

20.
The predominance of autoimmune diseases among women suggests that estrogen may modulate immune function. Monocytes and macrophages are important in initiating, maintaining, and resolving inflammatory responses through cell-signaling molecules, which control immune cell survival. One important mechanism of cell survival is mediated by the Fas/Fas ligand (FasL) system. In this study, the link between estrogen, monocytes/macrophages, and the Fas/FasL system was investigated. Estrogen treatment increased FasL expression in monocytes through the binding of the estrogen receptors (ER) to the estrogen recognizing elements and AP-1 motifs present at the FasL promoter. Furthermore, estrogen induced apoptosis in monocytes expressing ERbeta, but not in monocyte-differentiated macrophages expressing ERalpha. The expression of either ERalpha or ERbeta and their response to estrogen in monocytes was found to be dependent on the their stage of cell differentiation. Previously, we have shown that estrogen replacement therapy in postmenopausal women decreased the number of circulating monocytes. In this study, we have characterized the molecular mechanism by which estrogen regulates monocytes homeostasis. These findings indicate that estrogen may regulate immune cell survival through the Fas/FasL system. There is biological relevance to these findings in view of studies showing that accumulation of activated monocytes is involved in the pathogenesis of conditions such as vasculititis, arteriosclerosis, and rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

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