Functional expression of Fas and Fas ligand on human gut lamina propria T lymphocytes. A potential role for the acidic sphingomyelinase pathway in normal immunoregulation

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_9BFB78CA6D4D
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Functional expression of Fas and Fas ligand on human gut lamina propria T lymphocytes. A potential role for the acidic sphingomyelinase pathway in normal immunoregulation
Journal
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Author(s)
De Maria  R., Boirivant  M., Cifone  M. G., Roncaioli  P., Hahne  M., Tschopp  J., Pallone  F., Santoni  A., Testi  R.
ISSN
0021-9738 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/1996
Volume
97
Number
2
Pages
316-22
Notes
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't --- Old month value: Jan 15
Abstract
The expression and function of Fas (CD95/APO-1), a cell surface receptor directly responsible for triggering cell death by apoptosis, was investigated on human T lymphocytes resident within the intestinal lamina propria, a major site of antigen challenge and persistent lymphocyte activation. Three color immunofluorescence and FACS analysis indicated that virtually all freshly isolated human gut lamina propria T lymphocytes (T-LPL) express Fas, together with the marker of progress activation CD45R0. A discrete fraction of freshly isolated T-LPL also constitutively expressed Fas ligand (FasL), perhaps as a result of recent in vivo activation. Importantly, whereas Fas cross-linking did not result in apoptosis induction in peripheral blood T lymphocytes (T-PBL), Fas was found to be fully effective in generating the apoptotic signal in T-LPL. This was associated with the activation of an acidic sphingomyelinase and with ceramide generation, early events known to be involved in Fas-mediated apoptotic signaling. By contrast, acidic sphingomyelinase activation and ceramide production were not detectable in T-PBL after Fas cross-linking. However C2-ceramide, a cell permeant synthetic analog of ceramide, could efficiently induce apoptosis in T-LPL and T-PBL when added exogenously. These data indicate that T-LPL constitutively express both Fas and FasL and that Fas cross-linking generates signals resulting in sphingomyelin hydrolysis and apoptosis, outlining a potential mechanism involved in intestinal tolerance. Moreover, they provide the first evidence of a role for ceramide-mediated pathways in normal immunoregulation.
Keywords
Antigens, CD45/metabolism Antigens, CD95/*metabolism Apoptosis Ceramides/pharmacology Fas Ligand Protein Flow Cytometry Humans *Immunity, Mucosal Intestinal Mucosa/cytology/*immunology Membrane Glycoproteins/*metabolism Sphingomyelin Phosphodiesterase/*physiology Sphingomyelins/metabolism T-Lymphocytes/*metabolism
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
24/01/2008 16:18
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:02
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