Forced overexpression of wild-type Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP) causes postmitotic neurons to degenerate. Caspase-3 (CPP32) is a principal cell death protease involved in neuronal apoptosis during physiological development and under pathological conditions. Here, we investigated whether APP overexpression activates caspase-3 in human postmitotic neurons using adenovirus-mediated gene transfer. When a recombinant adenovirus vector expressing human wild-type APP695 was infected in vitro into neurally differentiated embryonal carcinoma NT2 cells, only postmitotic neurons underwent severe degeneration. Before neurodegeneration, full-length APP- and Abeta-immunoreactive peptides were accumulated in infected neurons, and caspase-3-like protease activity was markedly elevated. Western blot analysis revealed that activated caspase-3 subunits were generated in APP-accumulating neurons. Such neuronal caspase-3 activation was undetectable in NT2 neurons infected with beta-galactosidase-expressing adenovirus. Addition of the caspase-3 inhibitor acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde to the culture medium significantly reduced the severity of degeneration exhibited by APP-overexpressing neurons. Immunocytochemical analyses revealed that some APP-accumulating neurons contained activated caspase-3 subunits and exhibited the characteristics of apoptosis, such as chromatin condensation and DNA fragmentation. Activation of caspase-3 was also observed in vivo in rat hippocampal neurons infected with the APP-expressing adenovirus. These results suggest that wild-type APP is an intrinsic activator of caspase-3-mediated death machinery in postmitotic neurons.
T helper-2 (T H 2)-bias, the propensity of naive CD4 + T cells to differentiate into interleukin 4 (IL-4) secreting T H 2 cells, is a genetic trait impacting infectious, autoimmune and allergic disease susceptibility. T H 2-bias correlates with the amount of IL-4 initially secreted by newly activated T H cells that feeds back positively through the IL-4R-STAT6-GATA3 pathway to drive T H 2 development. Here, we identify Mina, a JmjC family member, as a genetic determinant of T H 2-bias. Mina specifically bound to and repressed the Il4 promoter. Mina overexpression in transgenic mice impaired Il4 expression, while its knockdown in primary CD4 + T cells led to Il4 derepression. Together, these findings provide mechanistic insight into an Il4 regulatory pathway controlling T H differentiation and genetic variation in T H 2-bias. Naive CD4 + T cells are multipotent sentinels of the immune system, poised to respond to instructive signals from antigen-presenting cells by differentiating into distinct effector cell lineages. These include T helper (T H ) 1 and T H 2 cells, differentially adapted for the control, respectively, of intra-and extracellular pathogens, in part via developmentally acquired potential for high expression of distinct cytokine genes 1 . Dysregulated CD4 + T cell development can promote susceptibility to infectious, autoimmune and allergic disease [2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] .Interleukin 4 (IL-4) [http://www.signaling-gateway.org/molecule/query?afcsid=A001262], the canonical T H 2 effector cytokine, is also a critical developmental determinant, promoting Accession codesThe microarray data are deposited in RCAI RefDIC (URL: http://refdic.rcai.riken.jp/welcome.cgi) 50 under the following accession codes: RMSPTB007001 and RMSPTB008001. 11,12 to promote the differentiation of T H 2 cells possessing the capacity to secrete copious amounts of IL-4 10, 13-18 . Thus, regulation of autocrine IL-4 expression by activated T H cells is a key control point in T helper cell lineage commitment. Nonetheless, the molecular mechanism underlying this regulation is incompletely understood. Author contributions NIH Public AccessT H 2-bias is a complex genetic trait characterizing variation in the propensity of naive T H cells to differentiate into T H 2 (as opposed to T H 1) cells. T H 2-bias, measured experimentally as the amount of IL-4 produced by effector CD4 + T cells differentiated in vitro from naive T H cells activated under 'neutral' conditions (no exogenous cytokines added, except IL-2, and cultured without cytokine-specific antibodies), varies over 50-fold from the highproducer phenotype of BALB/c mice to the low-producer phenotype of B10.D2 mice and correlates with susceptibility to T H 2-dependent diseases such as bronchial asthma and leishmaniasis [14][15][16][19][20][21][22] . Various cellular mechanisms have been suggested as the basis for T H 2-bias, including variation in the sensitivity to prostaglandin 2 (PGE 2 )-dependent inhibition of interferon-γ (IFN-γ) production 23 , the timing of IL-1...
The B cell adaptor containing src homology 2 domain (BASH; also termed BLNK or SLP-65), is crucial for B cell antigen receptor (BCR)-mediated activation, proliferation, and differentiation of B cells. BCR-mediated tyrosine-phosphorylation of BASH creates binding sites for signaling effectors such as phospholipase Cγ (PLCγ)2 and Vav, while the function of its COOH-terminal src homology 2 domain is unknown. We have now identified hematopoietic progenitor kinase (HPK)1, a STE20-related serine/threonine kinase, as a protein that inducibly interacts with the BASH SH2 domain. BCR ligation induced rapid tyrosine-phosphorylation of HPK1 mainly by Syk and Lyn, resulting in its association with BASH and catalytic activation. BCR-mediated activation of HPK1 was impaired in Syk- or BASH-deficient B cells. The functional SH2 domain of BASH and Tyr-379 within HPK1 which we identified as a Syk-phosphorylation site were both necessary for interaction of both proteins and efficient HPK1 activation after BCR stimulation. Furthermore, HPK1 augmented, whereas its kinase-dead mutant inhibited IκB kinase β (IKKβ) activation by BCR engagement. These results reveal a novel BCR signaling pathway leading to the activation of HPK1 and subsequently IKKβ, in which BASH recruits tyrosine-phosphorylated HPK1 into the BCR signaling complex.
All raw data and information can be accessed from http://refdic.rcai.riken.jp/. The microarray data is also available at http://cibex.nig.ac.jp/ under CIBEX accession no. CBX19, and http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pride/ under PRIDE accession numbers 2354-2378 and 2414.
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