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      The induction of Bim expression in human T-cell blasts is dependent on nonapoptotic Fas/CD95 signaling.

      Blood
      Antigens, CD95, genetics, physiology, Apoptosis, Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins, Blast Crisis, pathology, Cell Death, Cytokines, deficiency, Gene Expression Regulation, Humans, Lymphoproliferative Disorders, etiology, Membrane Proteins, Mutation, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, Receptors, Death Domain, metabolism, Signal Transduction, T-Lymphocytes, Tumor Cells, Cultured

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          Abstract

          The BH3-only protein Bim is required for maintaining the homeostasis of the immune system, since Bim regulates the down-modulation of T-cell responses, mainly through cytokine deprivation. Using T-cell blasts from healthy donors and also from patients with autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndromes (ALPSs) due to homozygous loss-of-function mutation of FasL (ALPS-Ic) or heterozygous mutation in the Fas/CD95 death domain (ALPS-Ia), it is shown that the induction of Bim expression during the process of human T-cell blast generation is strictly dependent on FasL/Fas-mediated signaling. The main pathway by which Fas signaling regulates the levels of Bim expression in human T-cell blasts is the death-domain- and caspase-independent generation of discrete levels of H2O2, which results in the net increase of Foxo3a levels. The present results connect the 2 main pathways described until the moment for the control of T-cell responses: death receptor-mediated activation-induced cell death and apoptosis by cytokine deprivation.

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