Abstract

Productive rearrangement of the T-cell receptor (TCR) beta gene and signalling through the pre-TCR-CD3 complex are required for survival, proliferation and differentiation of T-cell progenitors (pro-T cells). Here we identify a role for death receptor signalling in early T-cell development using a dominant-negative mutant of the death receptor signal transducer FADD/MORT1 (FADD-DN). In rag-1(-/-) thymocytes, which are defective in antigen receptor gene rearrangement, FADD-DN bypassed the requirement for pre-TCR signalling, promoting pro-T-cell survival and differentiation to the more mature pre-T stage. Surprisingly, differentiation was not accompanied by the proliferation that occurs normally during transition to the pre-T stage. Consistent with a role for FADD/MORT1 in this cell division, FADD-DN rag-1(-/-) pro-T cells failed to proliferate in response to CD3epsilon ligation. Concomitant signalling through the pre-TCR and death receptors appears to trigger pro-T cell survival, proliferation and differentiation, whereas death receptor signalling in thymocytes that lack a pre-TCR induces apoptosis. Later in life all FADD-DN rag-1(-/-) mice developed thymic lymphoma, indicating that FADD/MORT1 can act as a tumour suppressor.

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