c-Rel-Dependent Priming of Naive T Cells by Inflammatory Cytokines

Authors:
Banerjee D, Liou HC and Sen R
In:
Source: Immunity
Publication Date: (2005)
Issue: 23(4): 445-458
Research Area:
Immunotherapy / Hematology
Cells used in publication:
T cell, mouse - C57BL/6
Species: mouse
Tissue Origin: blood
Platform:
Nucleofector® I/II/2b
Abstract
The intrinsic refractoriness of naive T cells for cytokine production is counteracted by cells of the innate immune system. Upon sensing danger via Toll-like receptors, these cells upregulate T cell costimulatory molecules and secrete cytokines that enhance T cell activation. We show that cytokine-mediated priming of naive T cells requires the NF-kappaB family member c-Rel. In resting naive cells c-Rel is associated primarily with IkappaBbeta, an inhibitory molecule that is not effectively degraded by TCR signals. Exposure of T cells to proinflammatory cytokines, TNF-alpha and IL-1beta, shifts c-Rel to IkappaBalpha-associated complexes that are readily targeted by the TCR. As a consequence, IL-2 and IFN-gamma mRNA are produced more quickly, and at higher levels, in cytokine-primed T cells. This mechanism does not operate in effector T cells where cytokine gene expression is c-Rel-independent. We propose that c-Rel plays a crucial role as a target of innate signals in T cells.