J Immunol. 1996 Mar 15;156(6):2282-93. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
In this study, we have investigated whether the enhanced apoptosis of
CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes throughout HIV infection was controlled by
the bcl-2 proto-oncogene, an inhibitor of programmed cell death (PCD) in
mammals. We have analyzed the intracellular expression of the Bcl-2
protein by flow cytometry in freshly isolated peripheral T cells from
HIV-infected and noninfected individuals. While no decrease in Bcl-2
expression was detected in the CD4+ T cell subset from the seropositive
donors, a reduced level of Bcl-2 was found in a fraction of CD8+ T
lymphocytes, with the proportion of these cells increasing as HIV
infection progressed. We show that the low Bcl-2-expressing CD8+ T cells
were highly susceptible to spontaneous apoptosis upon short term
culture. Interestingly, PCD significantly increased when these
lymphocytes were cultured in the presence of a Fas-specific mAb, which
was related to the high expression of the Fas Ag on their surface. The
low Bcl-2 CD8+ subpopulation displayed activation markers CD45RO,
HLA-DR, and CD38 and expressed TIA-1-positive, but perforin-negative,
granules, while lacking the CD28 Ag. These observations suggest that
such low Bcl-2 CD8+ T cells correspond to either immature or end-staged
anergic CTLs. Moreover, they indicate that down-regulation of Bcl-2 and
up-regulation of Bcl-2 and up-regulation of Fas in CD8+ T lymphocytes,
associated with the chronic stimulation of these cells during HIV
infection, might render them sensitive to Fas-mediated PCD. Such a
Bcl-2/Fas-regulated apoptosis could be responsible for the disappearance
of both memory CD45RO+ T cell response and HIV-specific cytotoxic
activity occurring in the course of HIV infection and could contribute
to AIDS pathogenesis.
Antigens, CD95/*BIOSYNTHESIS/PHYSIOLOGY Apoptosis/*IMMUNOLOGY Cells,
Cultured Down-Regulation (Physiology)/*IMMUNOLOGY Human HIV
Infections/*IMMUNOLOGY/PATHOLOGY Immune Tolerance Immunologic Memory
Immunophenotyping Lymphocyte Transformation Proto-Oncogene
Proteins/*BIOSYNTHESIS Support, Non-U.S. Gov't T-Lymphocytes,
Cytotoxic/CLASSIFICATION/*IMMUNOLOGY/METABOLISM Up-Regulation
(Physiology)/*IMMUNOLOGY JOURNAL ARTICLE
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