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1.
B-cell receptor (BCR) engagement with surface-tethered antigens leads to the formation of an immune synapse, which facilitates antigen uptake for presentation to T-lymphocytes. Antigen internalization and processing rely on the early dynein-dependent transport of BCR–antigen microclusters to the synapse center, as well as on the later polarization of the microtubule-organizing center (MTOC). MTOC repositioning allows the release of proteases and the delivery of MHC class II molecules at the synapse. Whether and how these events are coordinated have not been addressed. Here we show that the ancestral polarity protein Par3 promotes BCR–antigen microcluster gathering, as well as MTOC polarization and lysosome exocytosis, at the synapse by facilitating local dynein recruitment. Par3 is also required for antigen presentation to T-lymphocytes. Par3 therefore emerges as a key molecule in the coupling of the early and late events needed for efficient extraction and processing of immobilized antigen by B-cells.  相似文献   

2.
The Golgi apparatus in mammalian cells is positioned near the centrosome-based microtubule-organizing center (Fig. 1). Secretory cargo moves inward in membrane carriers for delivery to Golgi membranes in which it is processed and packaged for transport outward to the plasma membrane. Cytoplasmic dynein motor proteins (herein termed dynein) primarily mediate inward cargo carrier movement and Golgi positioning. These motors move along microtubules toward microtubule minus-ends embedded in centrosomes. Centripetal motility is controlled by a host of regulators whose precise functions remain to be determined. Significantly, a specific Golgi receptor for dynein has not been identified. This has impaired progress toward elucidation of membrane-motor-microtubule attachment in the periphery and, after inward movement, recycling of the motor for another round. Pericentrosomal positioning of the Golgi apparatus is dynamic. It is regulated during critical cellular processes such as mitosis, differentiation, cell polarization, and cell migration. Positioning is also important as it aligns the Golgi along an axis of cell polarity. In certain cell types, this promotes secretion directed to the proximal plasma membrane domain thereby maintaining specializations critical for diverse processes including wound healing, immunological synapse formation, and axon determination.  相似文献   

3.
In zebrafish, the MuSK receptor initiates neuromuscular synapse formation by restricting presynaptic growth cones and postsynaptic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) to the center of skeletal muscle cells. Increasing evidence suggests a role for Wnts in this process, yet how muscle cells respond to Wnt signals is unclear. Here, we show that in vivo, wnt11r and wnt4a initiate MuSK translocation from muscle membranes to recycling endosomes and that this transition is crucial for AChR accumulation at future synaptic sites. Moreover, we demonstrate that components of the planar cell polarity pathway colocalize to recycling endosomes and that this localization is MuSK dependent. Knockdown of several core components disrupts MuSK translocation to endosomes, AChR localization and axonal guidance. We propose that Wnt-induced trafficking of the MuSK receptor to endosomes initiates a signaling cascade to align pre- with postsynaptic elements. Collectively, these findings suggest a general mechanism by which Wnt signals shape synaptic connectivity through localized receptor endocytosis.  相似文献   

4.
Little is known about how adhesion molecules on APCs accumulate at immunological synapses. We show here that ICAM‐1 on APCs is continuously internalized and rapidly recycled back to the interface after antigen‐priming T‐cell contact. The internalization rate is high in APCs, including Raji B cells and dendritic cells, but low in endothelial cells. Internalization is significantly reduced by inhibitors of Na+/H+ exchangers (NHEs), suggesting that members of the NHE‐family regulate this process. Once internalized, ICAM‐1 is co‐localized with MHC class II in the polarized recycling compartment. Surprisingly, not only ICAM‐1, but also MHC class II, is targeted to the immunological synapse through LFA‐1‐dependent adhesion. Cytosolic ICAM‐1 is highly mobile and forms a tubular structure. Inhibitors of microtubule or actin polymerization can reduce ICAM‐1 mobility, and thereby block accumulation at immunological synapses. Membrane ICAM‐1 also moves to the T‐cell contact zone, presumably through an active, cytoskeleton‐dependent mechanism. Collectively, these results demonstrate that ICAM‐1 can be transported to the immunological synapse through the recycling compartment. Furthermore, the high‐affinity state of LFA‐1 on T cells is critical to induce targeted movements of both ICAM‐1 and MHC class II to the immunological synapse on APCs. J. Cell. Biochem. 111: 1125–1137, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Ag-specific interaction between T lymphocytes and dendritic cells (DCs) leads to both T cell and DC activation. CD154 (CD40 ligand)/CD40 interactions have been shown to play a major, although not exclusive, role in this functional cross-talk. Interactions between T cells and DCs are structured by an immunological synapse (IS), characterized by polarization of the T cell microtubule cytoskeleton toward the interacting DCs. Yet the role T cell polarization may play in T cell-induced DC activation is mostly unknown. In this study, we address the role of T cell polarity in CD154-dependent activation of DCs in a human model, using two different tools to block T cell polarity (i.e., a microtubule depolymerizing drug and an inhibitor of atypical protein kinase C). We show that CD154 is recruited and concentrated at the IS formed between human primary T cells and autologous DCs and that this recruitment requires T cell polarity at the IS. Moreover, we show that T cell polarization at the IS controls T cell-dependent CD154-CD40 signaling in DCs as well as CD154-dependent IL-12 secretion by DCs. This study shows that T cell polarity at the IS plays a key role in CD154/CD40-dependent cross-talk between CD4(+) T cells and DCs.  相似文献   

6.
Cognate interactions between T and B lymphocytes lead to the formation of the immunological synapse (IS) where bidirectional activation signals are exchanged. Although the molecular architecture and the function of the IS have been studied extensively on the T cell side, little is known about events occurring during synapse formation in Ag-presenting B cells. We investigated the impact of BCR and TLR signaling on human B cell activation and on the T and B cell side of the IS. On the T cell side, we observed that T cells polarized toward both naive and previously activated B cells. Nevertheless, when T cells interacted with different B cells simultaneously, T cells selectively polarized their secretory machinery toward preactivated B cells. Furthermore, both naive and preactivated B cells reoriented their microtubule-organizing center toward the synaptic T cell during cognate interactions. This phenomenon was rapid and not dependent on T cell secretory activity. Interestingly, not only the microtubule-organizing center but also the Golgi apparatus and Lamp-3(+) and MHC class II(+) vesicles all repositioned beneath the IS, suggesting that the entire endocytic/exocytic B cell compartment was reoriented toward the T cell. Taken together, our results show that the B cell activation status fine-tunes T cell polarization responses and reveal the capacity of naive and activated B cells to polarize toward T cells during cognate interactions.  相似文献   

7.
Natural killer cells are lymphocytes specialized to participate in host defense through their innate ability to mediate cytotoxicity by secreting the contents of preformed secretory lysosomes (lytic granules) directly onto a target cell. This form of directed secretion requires the formation of an immunological synapse and occurs stepwise with actin reorganization preceding microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) polarization to the synapse. Because MTOC polarization to the synapse is required for polarization of lytic granules, we attempted to define their interrelationship. We found that compared with the time required for MTOC polarization, lytic granules converged to the MTOC rapidly. The MTOC-directed movement of lytic granules was independent of actin and microtubule reorganization, dependent on dynein motor function, occurred before MTOC polarization, and did not require a commitment to cytotoxicity. This defines a novel paradigm for rapid MTOC-directed transport as a prerequisite for directed secretion, one that may prepare, but not commit cells for precision secretory function.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of insulin-induced down-regulation of surface membrane insulin receptors was studied in the muscle cell line BC3H-1. Down-regulation for the differentiated myocytes is dose- and time-dependent with a half-maximum response at 0.5 nM insulin and a maximum decrease of 50% in the number of surface insulin receptors following exposure to 20 nM insulin for 18 h at 37 degrees C, as confirmed by Scatchard analysis. These receptors were fully recoverable upon lysis of the down-regulated myocyte with Triton X-100, demonstrating that down-regulation is mediated solely by insulin-induced receptor internalization without detectable receptor degradation. Phospholipase C treatment of intact down-regulated cells and Triton X-100 treatment after subcellular fractionation showed that no cryptic or masked receptors were detectable within the plasma membrane. Insulin-induced receptor internalization was dependent upon cellular energy production, protein synthesis, and endocytosis, but was insensitive to agents which primarily affect lysosomal, cytoskeletal, or transglutaminase activities. The magnitude of insulin-induced down-regulation and the kinetics of down-regulation and recovery of cell surface receptors indicate that the surface and internal receptor pools are in dynamic equilibrium with each other. The kinetic data are accommodated by separate internalization rate constants for the unoccupied (0.01 h-1) and occupied (0.11 h-1) surface receptors and a single recycling rate constant (0.11 h-1) for the internalized receptors. This model also explains the previous apparently paradoxical finding in several other systems that down-regulation is more sensitive to hormone than hormone-receptor binding under physiologic conditions. Down-regulation in BC3H-1 myocytes, therefore, appears to be mediated solely by an insulin-induced increase in the receptor internalization rate constant and a consequent shift in the dynamic equilibrium between the surface and internalized receptor pools, resulting in a 50% decrease in the number of cell surface receptors. In other systems where the internalized hormone receptor is a substrate for rapid degradation, the essential role of this shift in mediating the down-regulation process may be obscured.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Recent findings report the selective internalization of core planar cell polarity components during mitosis followed by cell-non-autonomous polarized recycling. This novel mechanistic model explains how tissue polarity is inherited in daughter cells of proliferative tissue.  相似文献   

11.
Polarization of T cells involves reorientation of the microtubule organizing center (MTOC). Because activated ERK is localized at the immunological synapse, we investigated its role by showing that ERK activation is important for MTOC polarization. Suspecting that ERK phosphorylates a regulator of microtubules, we next focused on stathmin, a known ERK substrate. Our work indicates that during T cell activation, ERK is recruited to the synapse, allowing it to phosphorylate stathmin molecules near the immunological synapse. Supporting an important role of stathmin phosphorylation in T cell activation, we showed that T cell activation results in increased microtubule growth rate dependent on the presence of stathmin. The significance of this finding was demonstrated by results showing that CTLs from stathmin(-/-) mice displayed defective MTOC polarization and defective target cell cytolysis. These data implicate stathmin as a regulator of the microtubule network during T cell activation.  相似文献   

12.
Engagement of the T cell receptor leads to the accumulation of filamentous actin, which is necessary for the formation of the immunological synapse and subsequent T cell activation. In the December issue of Molecular Cell, Sasahara et al. provide new insights into the link between the T cell receptor and actin assembly in the immunological synapse, and reveal a critical regulatory role for PKC theta in this process.  相似文献   

13.
In the best understood models of eukaryotic directional sensing, chemotactic cells maintain a uniform distribution of surface receptors even when responding to chemical gradients. The yeast pheromone receptor is also uniformly distributed on the plasma membrane of vegetative cells, but pheromone induces its polarization into “crescents” that cap the future mating projection. Here, we find that in pheromone-treated cells, receptor crescents are visible before detectable polarization of actin cables and that the receptor can polarize in the absence of actin-dependent directed secretion. Receptor internalization, in contrast, seems to be essential for the generation of receptor polarity, and mutations that deregulate this process confer dramatic defects in directional sensing. We also show that pheromone induces the internalization and subsequent polarization of the mating-specific Gα and Gβ proteins and that the changes in G protein localization depend on receptor internalization and receptor–Gα coupling. Our data suggest that the polarization of the receptor and its G protein precedes actin polarization and is important for gradient sensing. We propose that the establishment of receptor/G protein polarity depends on a novel mechanism involving differential internalization and that this serves to amplify the shallow gradient of activated receptor across the cell.  相似文献   

14.
T cell receptor engagement by an APC induces the formation of a highly organized complex of surface receptors and intracellular signaling molecules, known as the immunological synapse, at the site of cell-cell contact. The transferrin receptor (TfR, CD71) is normally present in the plasma membrane and recycling endosomes. In this study, we show that, although the TfR is typically absent from lipid rafts at steady state, stimulation with a mitogenic mixture of anti-CD3 Abs of human Jurkat T cells leads to a rapid compartmentalization of the TfR into lipid rafts accompanying that of CD3epsilon and activated Lck. This change occurs very rapidly and is accompanied by an increase in the surface expression of the TfR, probably by translocation from an internal endosomal pool. TfR recruitment to lipid rafts was also observed in primary T cells treated with mitogenic anti-CD3 Abs and in Jurkat T cell-APC conjugates. The use of beads coated with Abs indicates that the surface and endosomal TfR pools redistribute to the contact site region in response to engagement of CD28 and CD3. In T cell-APC conjugates, the T cell TfR endosomal pool relocates beneath the contact site, whereas surface TfR localizes to the peripheral ring of the immunological synapse. In the presence of specific anti-TfR Abs, the total number of T cell-APC contacts and the percentage of conjugates with CD3 and Lck translocated to the contact site were reduced. Our results therefore suggest the involvement of the TfR in the formation of the immunological synapse.  相似文献   

15.
Regulation of constitutive TCR internalization by the zeta-chain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The ability of a T cell to be activated is critically regulated by the number of TCRs expressed on the plasma membrane. Cell surface TCR expression is influenced by dynamic processes such as synthesis and transport of newly assembled receptors, endocytosis of surface TCR, and recycling to the plasma membrane of internalized receptors. In this study, the internalization of fluorescently labeled anti-TCR Abs was used to analyze constitutive endocytosis of TCRs on T cells, and to investigate the role of the zeta-chain in this process. We found that cell surface TCRs lacking zeta were endocytosed more rapidly than completely assembled receptors, and that reexpression of full-length zeta led to a dose-dependent decrease in the rate of TCR internalization. Rapid TCR internalization was also observed with CD4(+)CD8(+) thymocytes from zeta-deficient mice, whereas TCR internalization on thymocytes from CD3-delta deficient animals was slow, similar to that of wild-type thymocytes. This identifies a specific role for zeta in the regulation of constitutive receptor internalization. Furthermore, chimeric zeta molecules containing non-native intracellular amino acid sequences also led to high levels of TCR expression and reduced TCR cycling. These effects were dependent solely on the length of the intracellular tail, ruling out a role for intracellular zeta-specific interactions with other molecules as a mechanism for regulating TCR internalization. Rather, these findings strongly support a model in which the zeta-chain stabilizes TCR residency on the cell surface, and functions to maintain cell surface receptor expression by sterically blocking internalization sequences in other TCR components.  相似文献   

16.
CD5 and CD6 are closely related lymphocyte surface receptors of the scavenger receptor cysteine-rich superfamily, which show highly homologous extracellular regions but little conserved cytoplasmic tails. Both molecules are expressed on the same lymphocyte populations (thymocytes, mature T cells, and B1a cells) and share similar co-stimulatory properties on mature T cells. Although several works have been reported on the molecular associations and the signaling pathway mediated by CD5, very limited information is available for CD6 in this regard. Here we show the physical association of CD5 and CD6 at the cell membrane of lymphocytes, as well as their localization at the immunological synapse. CD5 and CD6 co-immunoprecipitate from Brij 96 but not Nonidet P-40 cell lysates, independently of both the co-expression of other lymphocyte surface receptors and the integrity of CD5 cytoplasmic region. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer analysis, co-capping, and co-modulation experiments demonstrate the physical in vivo association of CD5 and CD6. Analysis of T cell/antigen-presenting cells conjugates shows the accumulation of both molecules at the immunological synapse. These results indicate that CD5 and CD6 are structurally and physically related receptors, which may be functionally linked to provide either similar or complementary accessory signals during T cell activation and/or differentiation.  相似文献   

17.
Chen LE  Gao C  Chen J  Xu XJ  Zhou DH  Chi ZQ 《Life sciences》2003,73(1):115-128
Internalization and recycling of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), such as the mu-opioid receptor, largely depend on agonist stimulation. Agonist-promoted internalization of some GPCRs has been shown to mediate receptor desensitization, resensitization, and down-regulation. In this study, we investigated whether different mu opioid agonists displayed different effects in receptor internalization and recycling, the potential mechanisms involved in ohmefentanyl-induced internalization process. In transfected Sf9 insect cells expressing 6His-tagged wild type mu opioid receptor, exposure to 100 nM ohmefentanyl caused a maximum internalization of the receptor at 30 min and receptors seemed to reappear at the cell membrane after 60 min as determined by radioligand binding assay. Ohmefentanyl-induced human mu opioid receptor internalization was concentration-dependent, with about 40% of the receptors internalized following a 30-min exposure to 1 microM ohmefentanyl. 10 microM morphine and 1 microM DAMGO could also induce about 40% internalization. The antagonist naloxone and pretreatment with pertussis toxin both blocked ohmefentanyl-induced internalization without affecting internalization themselves. Incubation with sucrose 0.45 M significantly inhibited ohmefentanyl-induced internalization of the mu receptor. The removal of agonists ohmefentanyl and morphine resulted in the receptors gradually returning to the cell surface over a 60 min period, while the removal of agonist DAMGO only partly resulted in the receptor recycling. The results of this study suggest that ohmefentanyl-induced internalization of human mu opioid receptor in Sf9 insect cells occurs via Gi/o protein-dependent process that likely involves clathrin-coated pits. In addition, the recycling process displays the differential modes of action of different agonists.  相似文献   

18.
T lymphocytes (T cells) circulate from the blood into secondary lymphoid organs for immune surveillance. In this study, we hypothesized that circulating T cells are heterogeneous and can be grouped according to their differential migratory capacity in response to chemoattractants, rather than expressions of certain receptors or cytokines. We further hypothesized that, at least in part, this intrinsic difference in motility may be related to the T cell function. We established motile (m-T) and non-motile T (nm-T) cell lines based on their response to the chemokine SDF-1α. m-T cells showed more irregular and polarized morphologies than nm-T cells did. Interestingly, m-T cells produced higher levels of IL-2, a marker for T cell activation, than nm-T cells did after stimulation; however, no differences were observed in terms of surface expression of T cell receptors (TCR), adhesion molecules LFA-1 and ICAM-1, and chemokine receptor CXCR4. Both cell lines also showed similar membrane events (i.e., T cell-APC conjugation, LFA-1 accumulation at the immunological synapse, and TCR internalization). In contrast, PKC-θ, a downstream of PI3K-Akt pathway was constitutively activated in m-T cells and the activation was more prominent during T cell stimulation. Consequently, NF-κB activity was selectively upregulated in m-T cells. This study is the first, to our knowledge, to demonstrate that T cells can be subcategorized on the basis of their intrinsic migratory capacity in relation to T cell activation.  相似文献   

19.
T‐cell activation requires signaling by T‐cell receptors (TCRs) that bind antigen on the antigen‐presenting cells (APCs) at the immunological synapse (IS). Sustained signaling requires continuous supply of new TCRs to the IS. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Fernández‐Arenas et al ( 2014 ) describe a novel role of β‐arrestin‐1 at the IS periphery: endocytosis of TCRs and chemokine CXCR4 receptors. Internalized TCRs are then delivered to the IS, where they engage antigen and support prolonged signaling, whereas CXCR4 internalization stops T‐cell migration.  相似文献   

20.
The immunological synapse: the more you look the less you know..   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Before T cells of the immune system can recognize pathogens, antigen presenting cells (APCs) must process pathogen-derived peptides and present them together with major histocompatibility complex molecules (MHC) to T lymphocytes. T lymphocytes then scan the surface of APCs and antigen-specific activation of the T cell will happen after interaction of T cell antigen receptor (TCR) with MHC-peptide complexes expressed at the membrane of APCs. This interaction takes place in a nanometer scale gap between the two cells, referred to as an immunological synapse. Recent three-dimensional fluorescence analysis of this synapse revealed a dynamic spatial organization of membrane receptors, cytoskeleton and intracellular signaling complexes on the T cell side showing specific patterns, which depend on the nature of the T cell:APC pair. Although it is obvious that establishment of an intimate contact between T cells and APCs will facilitate cell:cell communication it is not clear what is the role, if any, of this receptors patterning. This molecular reorganization has long been thought to enhance and/or sustain TCR signaling and thus T cell activation, but this is now a matter of controversy. Moreover, mechanisms controlling immunological synapse formation are still unraveled. Segregation of proteins may occur spontaneously as proposed by mathematical modeling taking into account membrane fluidity, protein size and receptor/ligand affinity. Alternatively patterning of the molecules at the cell:cell interface could be driven by active processes involving T cell signaling and/or specific features of the APC. These different questions will be discussed herein.  相似文献   

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