Mechanisms for segregating T cell receptor and adhesion molecules during immunological synapse formation in Jurkat T cells

被引:296
作者
Kaizuka, Yoshihisa [2 ]
Douglass, Adam D. [2 ]
Varma, Rajat [1 ]
Dustin, Michael L. [1 ]
Vale, Ronald D. [2 ]
机构
[1] NYU, Sch Med, Helan & Martin Kimmel Ctr Biol & Med Skirball Ins, Dept Pathol,Progam Mol Pathogenesis, New York, NY 10016 USA
[2] Univ Calif San Francisco, Howard Hughes Med Inst, Dept Cellular & Mol Pharmacol, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
关键词
actin; membrane microdomain; planar lipid bilayer; single-molecule imaging; supramolecular activation cluster;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0710258105
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
T cells interacting with antigen-presenting cells (APCs) form an "immunological synapse" (IS), a bull's-eye pattern composed of a central supramolecular activation cluster enriched with T cell receptors (TCRs) surrounded by a ring of adhesion molecules (a peripheral supramolecular activation cluster). The mechanism responsible for segregating TCR and adhesion molecules remains poorly understood. Here, we show that immortalized Jurkat T cells interacting with a planar lipid bilayer (mimicking an APC) will form an IS, thereby providing an accessible model system for studying the cell biological processes underlying IS formation. We found that an actin-dependent process caused TCR and adhesion proteins to cluster at the cell periphery, but these molecules appeared to segregate from one another at the earliest stages of microdomain formation. The TCR and adhesion microdomains attached to actin and were carried centripetally by retrograde flow. However, only the TCR microdomains penetrated into the actin-depleted cell center, whereas the adhesion microdomains appeared to be unstable without an underlying actin cytoskeleton. Our results reveal that TCR and adhesion molecules spatially partition from one another well before the formation of a mature IS and that differential actin interactions help to shape and maintain the final bull's-eye pattern of the IS.
引用
收藏
页码:20296 / 20301
页数:6
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   Timeline - Jurkat T cells and development of the T-cell receptor signalling paradigm [J].
Abraham, RT ;
Weiss, A .
NATURE REVIEWS IMMUNOLOGY, 2004, 4 (04) :301-308
[2]   Dynamic molecular interactions linking the T cell antigen receptor to the actin cytoskeleton [J].
Barda-Saad, M ;
Braiman, A ;
Titerence, R ;
Bunnell, SC ;
Barr, VA ;
Samelson, LE .
NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2005, 6 (01) :80-89
[3]   T cell receptor ligation induces the formation of dynamically regulated signaling assemblies [J].
Bunnell, SC ;
Hong, DI ;
Kardon, JR ;
Yamazaki, T ;
McGlade, CJ ;
Barr, VA ;
Samelson, LE .
JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 2002, 158 (07) :1263-1275
[4]   Actin and agonist MHC-peptide complex-dependent T cell receptor microclusters as scaffolds for signaling [J].
Campi, G ;
Varma, R ;
Dustin, ML .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 2005, 202 (08) :1031-1036
[5]   LFA-1/ICAM-1 interaction lowers the threshold of B cell activation by facilitating B cell adhesion and synapse formation [J].
Carrasco, YR ;
Fleire, SJ ;
Cameron, T ;
Dustin, ML ;
Batista, FD .
IMMUNITY, 2004, 20 (05) :589-599
[6]   Activation-induced polarized recycling targets T cell antigen receptors to the immunological synapse: Involvement of SNARE complexes [J].
Das, V ;
Nal, B ;
Dujeancourt, A ;
Thoulouze, MI ;
Galli, T ;
Roux, P ;
Dautry-Varsat, A ;
Alcover, A .
IMMUNITY, 2004, 20 (05) :577-588
[7]   Single-molecule microscopy reveals plasma membrane microdomains created by protein-protein networks that exclude or trap signaling molecules in T cells [J].
Douglass, AD ;
Vale, RD .
CELL, 2005, 121 (06) :937-950
[8]   A novel adaptor protein orchestrates receptor patterning and cytoskeletal polarity in T-cell contacts [J].
Dustin, ML ;
Olszowy, MW ;
Holdorf, AD ;
Li, J ;
Bromley, S ;
Desai, N ;
Widder, P ;
Rosenberger, F ;
van der Merwe, PA ;
Allen, PM ;
Shaw, AS .
CELL, 1998, 94 (05) :667-677
[9]   Staging and resetting T cell activation in SMACs [J].
Freiberg, BA ;
Kupfer, H ;
Maslanik, W ;
Delli, J ;
Kappler, J ;
Zaller, DM ;
Kupfer, A .
NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2002, 3 (10) :911-917
[10]   HS1 functions as an essential actin-regulatory adaptor protein at the immune synapse [J].
Gomez, Timothy S. ;
McCarney, Sean D. ;
Carrizosa, Esteban ;
Labno, Christine M. ;
Comiskey, Erin O. ;
Nolz, Jeffrey C. ;
Zhu, Peimin ;
Freedman, Bruce D. ;
Clark, Marcus R. ;
Rawlings, David J. ;
Billadeau, Daniel D. ;
Burkhardt, Janis K. .
IMMUNITY, 2006, 24 (06) :741-752