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Ian4 is required for mitochondrial integrity and T cell survival

Pandarpurkar, Malini
Wilson-Fritch, Leanne
Corvera, Silvia
Markholst, Helle
Hornum, Lars
Greiner, Dale L.
Mordes, John P.
Rossini, Aldo A.
Bortell, Rita
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Abstract

Apoptosis is a regulated cell death program controlled by extrinsic and intrinsic signaling pathways. The intrinsic pathway involves stress signals that activate pro-apoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family, inducing permeabilization of mitochondria and release of apoptogenic factors. These proteins localize to the outer mitochondrial membrane. Ian4, a mitochondrial outer membrane protein with GTP-binding activity, is normally present in thymocytes, T cells, and B cells. We and others have recently discovered that a mutation in the rat Ian4 gene results in severe T cell lymphopenia that is associated with the expression of autoimmune diabetes. The mechanism by which Ian4 controls T cell homeostasis is unknown. Here we show that the absence of Ian4 in T cells causes mitochondrial dysfunction, increased mitochondrial levels of stress-inducible chaperonins and a leucine-rich protein, and T cell-specific spontaneous apoptosis. T cell activation and caspase 8 inhibition both prevented apoptosis, whereas transfection of T cells with Ian4-specific small interfering RNA recapitulated the apoptotic phenotype. The findings establish Ian4 as a tissue-specific regulator of mitochondrial integrity.

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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Sep 2;100(18):10382-7. Epub 2003 Aug 20. Link to article on publisher's site

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DOI
10.1073/pnas.1832170100
PubMed ID
12930893
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