Receptor crosslinking of T-cell hybridomas induces cell activation followed by apoptosis1-6. This activation-induced cell death requires de novo synthesis of RNA and proteins1-3, but the actual gene products that provide the death signal have not been identified4-6. We show here that receptor crosslinking induces Fas ligand and upregulates Fas, and that the ensuing engagement of Fas by Fas ligand activates the cell-death programme. Cell death, but not activation, can be selectively prevented by a soluble Fas-immunoglobulin fusion protein. Thus, Fas and Fas ligand are the death-gene products, and their interaction accounts for the molecular mechanism of activation-induced T-cell death. © 1995, Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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Ju, S. T., Panka, D. J., Cui, H., Ettinger, R., Ei-Khatib, M., Sherrf, D. H., … Marshak-Rothstein, A. (1995, February 2). Fas(CD95)/FasL interactions required for programmed cell death after T-cell activation. Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/373444a0