The Linker Histone H1.2 Is an Intermediate in the Apoptotic Response to Cytokine Deprivation in T-Effectors

Author:

Garg Megha12,Perumalsamy Lakshmi R.13,Shivashankar G. V.4,Sarin Apurva1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bellary Road, Bangalore, Karnataka 560065, India

2. Department of Biotechnology, Mysore University, Mysore, Karnataka 570005, India

3. Department of Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600036, India

4. Mechanobiology Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117411

Abstract

Tissue homeostasis is a dynamic process involving proliferation and the removal of redundant or damaged cells. This is exemplified in the coordinated deletion—triggered by limiting trophic factors/cytokines in the extracellular milieu—of differentiated T cells overproduced during the mammalian immune response. However, mechanisms by which extracellular cues are perceived and transduced as apoptotic triggers remain incompletely understood. T-effectors are dependent on cytokines for survival and undergo apoptosis following cytokine withdrawal. Here we report that leptomycin B (LMB), an inhibitor of nuclear export machinery, protected T-effectors from apoptosis implicating a nuclear intermediate in the apoptotic pathway. Evidence is presented that the linker histone H1.2 localizes to the cytoplasm, by a mechanism sensitive to regulation by LMB, to activate apoptotic signaling culminating in nuclear and mitochondrial damage in T-effectors in response to cytokine deprivation. H1.2 is detected in a complex with the proapoptotic mitochondrial resident Bak and its subcellular localization regulated by Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK), an intermediate in the apoptotic cascade in T-effectors. These data suggest that metabolic stressors may impinge on H1.2 dynamics favoring its activity at the mitochondrion, thereby functioning as a molecular switch for T-effector apoptosis.

Funder

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Cell Biology

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