During an acute immune response, CD8 T cells undergo rapid expansion followed by a contraction phase during which the majority of activated T cells die, leaving a few survivors to persist as memory cells. The regulation of T cell survival is critical at each stage of this response. 4-1BB, a TNFR family member, has been implicated in prolonging the survival of activated and memory CD8 T cells; however, the precise mechanisms by which 4-1BB sustains T cell survival are incompletely understood. Upon aggregation on T cells, 4-1BB associates with two TNFR-associated factors (TRAF), TRAF1 and TRAF2. TRAF2 is essential for downstream signaling from 4-1BB; however, the role of TRAF1 in 4-1BB signaling has not been elucidated and there have been conflicting data as to whether TRAF1 provides a positive or a negative signal in T cells. In this study, we report that TRAF1 plays a critical role in survival signaling downstream of 4-1BB during CD8 T cell expansion in response to viral infection in vivo. Further analysis reveals that TRAF1-deficient cells are impaired in their ability to up-regulate the prosurvival Bcl-2 family member Bcl-xL and show increased levels of the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member Bim following 4-1BB signaling. TRAF1-deficient CD8 T cells fail to activate ERK in response to 4-1BB ligation and inhibition of ERK signaling downstream of 4-1BB in wild-type cells leads to increased Bim levels. Thus, TRAF1 has a prosurvival effect in CD8 T cells via the 4-1BB-mediated up-regulation of Bcl-xL and ERK-dependent Bim down-modulation.
Mice lacking CD137L (4-1BBL) show normal primary expansion and contraction of the CD8+ T cell response to influenza virus, but exhibit a defect in Ag-specific CD8+ T cell numbers at 3–6 wk postinfection. Previous results showed that the decrease in CD8+ T cell numbers in this model is not due to a programming defect during primary expansion. Thus, it appears that 4-1BB/4-1BBL interactions control the number of surviving CD8+ effector memory cells, late in the primary response. In this report, we asked how 4-1BB on T cells could play a role after Ag has apparently been cleared from the host. We show that IL-15, a cytokine involved in regulation of CD8+ memory T cell survival, induces the expression of 4-1BB on CD8+CD44high memory phenotype T cells, but not on CD4+ T cells. The Ag-independent induction of 4-1BB by IL-15 was dependent on MAPK p38 and ERK activation. Transfer of in vitro-generated OT-I CD8+ memory T cells into unimmunized wild-type or 4-1BBL-deficient hosts revealed a 2- to 3-fold survival advantage when 4-1BBL was present, recapitulating the effect seen in the endogenous response to influenza in mice. Decreases in the overall number of memory CD8+ T cells were also observed in the bone marrow of unmanipulated 4-1BBL-deficient mice. These data suggest a model whereby 4-1BB expression on memory CD8+ T cells, perhaps due to encounter with IL-15 in the bone marrow, allows 4-1BB/4-1BBL interactions to maintain memory CD8 T cell survival in the absence of Ag.
The mechanisms that allow the maintenance of immunological memory remain incompletely defined. Here we report that tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR)-associated factor (TRAF) 1, a protein recruited in response to several costimulatory TNFR family members, is required for maximal CD8 T cell responses to influenza virus in mice. Decreased recovery of CD8 T cells in vivo occurred under conditions where cell division was unimpaired. In vitro, TRAF1-deficient, antigen-activated T cells accumulated higher levels of the proapoptotic BH3-only family member Bim, particularly the most toxic isoform, Bim S. In the presence of excess IL-15, memory phenotype T cells with similar surface phenotype and comparable levels of Bcl-2 family members could be generated from WT or TRAF1-deficient T cell receptor transgenic OT-I T cells. However, when the memory CD8 T cells were allowed to compete for survival signals in the absence of antigen in vivo, the TRAF1-deficient T cells showed decreased recovery compared with TRAF1-sufficient T cells. This defect in T cell recovery in vivo was alleviated by introduction of siRNA to down-modulate Bim in TRAF1-deficient memory T cells. These studies identify the TRAF1 signaling axis and Bim down-regulation as critical for CD8 memory T cell survival in vivo.Bcl-2 family ͉ influenza virus ͉ knockout/transgenic mice
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