![]() ![]() | [Frontiers in Bioscience 2, d49-60, February 15, 1997] Reprints PubMed CAVEAT LECTOR |
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ROLE OF NF-KappaB IN THE CONTROL OF APOPTOTIC AND PROLIFERATIVE RESPONSES IN IL-2-RESPONSIVE T CELLS Javier Gómez, David García-Domingo, Carlos Martínez-A.1 and Angelita Rebollo Department of Immunology and Oncology, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Campus de Cantoblanco, E-28049 Madrid, Spain Received 1/21/97; Accepted 1/30/97; On-line 2/15/97
![]() The NF-kappaB/Rel/IkappaB family of transcription factors regulates a number of genes involved in a wide variety of biological processes. The activation of p53, c-myc and Ras genes suggests a role for NF-kappaB in cell proliferation; NF-kappaB is also important in immune and inflammatory responses. By virtue of its role in apoptosis, NF-kappaB participates in the thymus as well as in embryonic development. The NF-kappaB family of transcription factors is also involved in viral transcription, transformation and in the development of some types of human cancers. Given the pivotal role of NF-kappaB, clarification is needed of the mechanisms through which its deregulation contributes to disease. Several aspects of NF-kappaB regulation, such as phosphatase involvement, the mechanism of IkappaB ubiquitination and the regulation of nuclear translocation, remain obscure. Here, we review and discuss the function of NF-kappaB activation in IL-2-stimulation and in apoptosis induced by IL-2 deprivation in T cells.
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