13 research outputs found
Expression of the APO-1 antigen in Burkitt Lymphoma Cell Lines Correlates with a Shift towards a Lymphoblastoid Phenotype.
APO-1 is a cell surface molecule that induces apoptosis when ligated with the monoclonal antibody anti-APO-1. Expression of APO-1 and response to anti-APO-1 was investigated in a number of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-positive and -negative Burkitt lymphoma (BL) cell lines, in EBV-immortalized lymphoblastoid cell lines, and in cells from fresh BL biopsies. APO-1 was not expressed in EBV-negative cell lines and in EBV-positive BL cell lines with a phenotype corresponding to BL tumor biopsy cells (CD10+, CD21-, CD23-, CD30-, CD39-, CDw70-, CD77+). Accordingly, fresh BL cells obtained from three BL biopsies were APO-1 negative. EBV-positive BL cell lines that had acquired a lymphoblastoid phenotype (CD10-, CD21+, CD23+, CD30+, CD39+, CDw70+, CD77-) upon prolonged in vitro cultivation, as well as normal B-lymphoblastoid cell lines, expressed a high density of APO-1. APO-1 may, therefore, be regarded as a B-cell activation marker. APO-1 expression is not the only prerequisite for anti-APO-1-induced apoptosis because 6 of 7 APO-1-expressing EBV-positive BL cell lines were not sensitive to anti-APO-1, whereas all lymphoblastoid cell lines were killed by anti-APO-1. The sensitivity of lymphoblastoid cell lines to anti-APO-1-mediated apoptosis may open a new therapeutic approach for the treatment of EBV-induced lymphoproliferative lesions in immunocompromised individuals, because these are composed of cells with a lymphoblastoid phenotype
Role of mitogen-activated protein kinases in activation-induced apoptosis of T cells
A member of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family, Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), has been implicated in regulating apoptosis in various cell types. We have investigated the requirement for another type of MAP kinase, extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) in activation-induced cell death (AICD) of T cells. AICD is the process by which recently activated T cells undergo apoptosis when restimulated through the T-cell antigen receptor. Here we show that both JNK and ERK are activated rapidly upon T-cell receptor (TCR) ligation prior to the onset of AICD. A chemical inhibitor of ERK activation, PD 098059, inhibits ERK activation and apoptosis, while JNK activation is not inhibited. This suggests that JNK activation is not sufficient for apoptosis. TCR cross-linking induces expression of the apoptosis-inducing factor, Fas ligand (FasL), and its expression correlates with ERK activation. In addition, apoptosis induced by direct ligation of the Fas receptor by anti-Fas antibody is not associated with ERK activation and is not inhibited by PD 098059. These data suggest that ERK activation is an early event during T-cell apoptosis induced by antigen–receptor ligation, and is not involved in apoptosis per se but in the expression of FasL. MAP kinase family members may be similarly involved in inducing apoptosis signals in other cell types