Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.284, No.3, 583-586, 2001
Interferon-alpha promotes survival of human primary B-lymphocytes via phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase
Signaling pathways for the antiviral and antiproliferative biological effects of type I interferons (IFN) are well established. In this report we demonstrate a novel signaling pathway for IFN-alpha, as it induced rapid phosphorylation of both PKB/Akt and its substrate fork-head. The PI3-kinase inhibitor LY294002 abolished these phosphorylations, PI3-kinase has been implicated in cell survival mediating its effect through the second messenger PIP3 and the subsequent activation of PKB/Akt. We could show that IFN-alpha inhibited spontaneous apoptosis of primary B-lymphocytes, in the absence of a mitogenic stimulus. This effect was inhibited by LY294002. Thus, our data suggests that IFN-alpha promotes survival of peripheral B-lymphocytes via the PI3-kinase-PKB/Akt pathway. In addition, IFN-alpha stimulation of anti-IgM activated cells resulted in downregulated expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p27/Kip1.