Abstract

Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is a well-conserved intracellular degradation process. Recent studies examining cells lacking the autophagy genes Atg5 and Atg7 have demonstrated that autophagy plays essential roles in cell survival during starvation, in innate cell clearance of microbial pathogens, and in neural cell maintenance. However, the role of autophagy in T lymphocyte development and survival is not known. Here, we demonstrate that autophagosomes form in primary mouse T lymphocytes. By generating Atg5−/− chimeric mice, we found that Atg5-deficient T lymphocytes underwent full maturation. However, the numbers of total thymocytes and peripheral T and B lymphocytes were reduced in Atg5 chimeras. In the periphery, Atg5−/− CD8+ T lymphocytes displayed dramatically increased cell death. Furthermore, Atg5−/− CD4+ and CD8+ T cells failed to undergo efficient proliferation after TCR stimulation. These results demonstrate a critical role for Atg5 in multiple aspects of lymphocyte development and function and suggest that autophagy may be essential for both T lymphocyte survival and proliferation.

Keywords

ATG5AutophagyBiologyCell biologyCD8Programmed cell deathT cellLymphocyteImmunologyImmune systemApoptosisGenetics

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAutophagyAutophagy-Related Protein 5Base SequenceCD8-Positive T-LymphocytesCell DifferentiationCell ProliferationCell SurvivalDNA PrimersFemaleFetal Tissue TransplantationHematopoietic Stem Cell TransplantationMiceMiceInbred C57BLMiceKnockoutMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsPregnancyReceptorsAntigenT-CellT-LymphocytesTransplantation Chimera

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Publication Info

Year
2006
Type
article
Volume
204
Issue
1
Pages
25-31
Citations
605
Access
Closed

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605
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29
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Cite This

Heather H. Pua, Ivan Dzhagalov, Mariana Chuck et al. (2006). A critical role for the autophagy gene Atg5 in T cell survival and proliferation. The Journal of Experimental Medicine , 204 (1) , 25-31. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20061303

Identifiers

DOI
10.1084/jem.20061303
PMID
17190837
PMCID
PMC2118420

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%