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A Reducing Milieu Renders Cofilin Insensitive to Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-Bisphosphate (PIP2) Inhibition
Authors:Bianca Schulte  Isabel John  Bernd Simon  Christoph Brockmann  Stefan A. Oelmeier  Beate Jahraus  Henning Kirchgessner  Selina Riplinger  Teresa Carlomagno  Guido H. Wabnitz  Yvonne Samstag
Affiliation:From the Institute for Immunology, Ruprecht Karls University, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.;the §Structural and Computational Biology Unit, European Molecular Biology Laboratory, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany, and ;the Institute of Process Engineering in Life Sciences, Section IV: Biomolecular Separation Engineering, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), D-76131 Karlsruhe, Germany
Abstract:Oxidative stress can lead to T cell hyporesponsiveness. A reducing micromilieu (e.g. provided by dendritic cells) can rescue T cells from such oxidant-induced dysfunction. However, the reducing effects on proteins leading to restored T cell activation remained unknown. One key molecule of T cell activation is the actin-remodeling protein cofilin, which is dephosphorylated on serine 3 upon T cell costimulation and has an essential role in formation of mature immune synapses between T cells and antigen-presenting cells. Cofilin is spatiotemporally regulated; at the plasma membrane, it can be inhibited by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2). Here, we show by NMR spectroscopy that a reducing milieu led to structural changes in the cofilin molecule predominantly located on the protein surface. They overlapped with the PIP2- but not actin-binding sites. Accordingly, reduction of cofilin had no effect on F-actin binding and depolymerization and did not influence the cofilin phosphorylation state. However, it did prevent inhibition of cofilin activity through PIP2. Therefore, a reducing milieu may generate an additional pool of active cofilin at the plasma membrane. Consistently, in-flow microscopy revealed increased actin dynamics in the immune synapse of untransformed human T cells under reducing conditions. Altogether, we introduce a novel mechanism of redox regulation: reduction of the actin-remodeling protein cofilin renders it insensitive to PIP2 inhibition, resulting in enhanced actin dynamics.
Keywords:Cofilin   Oxidation-Reduction   Phosphatidylinositol Signaling   Redox Regulation   T Cell
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