Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Immunol. 2018 Jan 18;9:25. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00025. eCollection 2018.
Full T cell activation requires coordination of signals from multiple receptor-ligand pairs that interact in parallel at a specialized cell-cell contact site termed the immunological synapse (IS). Signaling at the IS is intimately associated with actin dynamics; T cell receptor (TCR) engagement induces centripetal flow of the T cell actin network, which in turn enhances the function of ligand-bound integrins by promoting conformational change. Here, we have investigated the effects of integrin engagement on actin flow, and on associated signaling events downstream of the TCR. We show that integrin engagement significantly decelerates centripetal flow of the actin network. In primary CD4 T cells, engagement of either LFA-1 or VLA-4 by their respective ligands ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 slows actin flow. Slowing is greatest when T cells interact with low mobility integrin ligands, supporting a predominately drag-based mechanism. Using integrin ligands presented on patterned surfaces, we demonstrate that the effects of localized integrin engagement are distributed across the actin network, and that focal adhesion proteins, such as talin, vinculin, and paxillin, are recruited to sites of integrin engagement. Further analysis shows that talin and vinculin are interdependent upon one another for recruitment, and that ongoing actin flow is required. Suppression of vinculin or talin partially relieves integrin-dependent slowing of actin flow, indicating that these proteins serve as molecular clutches that couple engaged integrins to the dynamic actin network. Finally, we found that integrin-dependent slowing of actin flow is associated with reduction in tyrosine phosphorylation downstream of the TCR, and that this modulation of TCR signaling depends on expression of talin and vinculin. More generally, we found that integrin-dependent effects on actin retrograde flow were strongly correlated with effects on TCR signaling. Taken together, these studies support a model in which ligand-bound integrins engage the actin cytoskeletal network talin and vinculin, and tune TCR signaling events by modulating actin dynamics at the IS.
T 细胞的完全激活需要来自多个受体-配体对的信号协调,这些信号在一个称为免疫突触(IS)的特化细胞-细胞接触部位平行相互作用。IS 处的信号与肌动蛋白动力学密切相关;T 细胞受体(TCR)的结合诱导 T 细胞肌动蛋白网络向心流动,进而通过促进构象变化来增强配体结合整合素的功能。在这里,我们研究了整合素结合对肌动蛋白流和 TCR 下游相关信号事件的影响。我们发现整合素结合显著降低了肌动蛋白网络的向心流动。在原代 CD4 T 细胞中,LFA-1 或 VLA-4 通过其各自的配体 ICAM-1 和 VCAM-1 与细胞的结合,显著减缓了肌动蛋白流。当 T 细胞与低迁移率的整合素配体相互作用时,减缓作用最大,支持主要基于阻力的机制。使用在图案化表面上呈现的整合素配体,我们证明了局部整合素结合的影响分布在整个肌动蛋白网络上,并且粘着斑蛋白,如 talin、vinculin 和 paxillin,被募集到整合素结合部位。进一步的分析表明,talin 和 vinculin 相互依赖于彼此的募集,并且持续的肌动蛋白流是必需的。抑制 vinculin 或 talin 部分缓解了整合素依赖性的肌动蛋白流减缓,表明这些蛋白作为分子离合器,将结合的整合素与动态肌动蛋白网络耦联。最后,我们发现整合素依赖性的肌动蛋白流减缓与 TCR 下游酪氨酸磷酸化的减少有关,并且这种 TCR 信号的调制依赖于 talin 和 vinculin 的表达。更一般地说,我们发现整合素对肌动蛋白逆行流动的影响与对 TCR 信号的影响强烈相关。综上所述,这些研究支持了一种模型,即结合配体的整合素通过与肌动蛋白细胞骨架网络结合 talin 和 vinculin,并通过调节 IS 处的肌动蛋白动力学来调节 TCR 信号事件。