scholarly journals Trafficking of an Acylated Cytosolic Protein: Newly Synthesized p56lck Travels to the Plasma Membrane via the Exocytic Pathway

1999 ◽  
Vol 145 (3) ◽  
pp. 457-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie-José J.E. Bijlmakers ◽  
Mark Marsh

The Src-related tyrosine kinase p56lck (Lck) is primarily expressed in T lymphocytes where it localizes to the cytosolic side of the plasma membrane and associates with the T cell coreceptors CD4 and CD8. As a model for acylated proteins, we studied how this localization of Lck is achieved. We followed newly synthesized Lck by pulse–chase analysis and found that membrane association of Lck starts soon after synthesis, but is not complete until at least 30–45 min later. Membrane-binding kinetics are similar in CD4/CD8-positive and CD4/CD8-negative cells. In CD4-positive T cells, the interaction with CD4 rapidly follows membrane association of Lck. Studying the route via which Lck travels from its site of synthesis to the plasma membrane, we found that: CD4 associates with Lck within 10 min of synthesis, long before CD4 has reached the plasma membrane; Lck associates with intracellular CD4 early after synthesis and with cell surface CD4 at later times; and transport of CD4-bound Lck to the plasma membrane is inhibited by Brefeldin A. These data indicate that the initial association of newly synthesized Lck with CD4, and therefore with membranes, occurs on intracellular membranes of the exocytic pathway. From this location Lck is transported to the plasma membrane.

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 17-18
Author(s):  
Nikhil Hebbar ◽  
Chunxu Qu ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
Ying Shao ◽  
Phuong Nguyen ◽  
...  

Pediatric T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is a high-risk disease due to treatment related complications and poor prognosis of patients with relapsed disease. Immunotherapy with monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) and/or chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cells for T-ALL is limited by identification of tumor specific target antigens. Differential expression is necessary to prevent on-target/off-tumor toxicities and fratricide of activated T-cells. Targeting multiple antigens can bypass immune escape and result in improved T-cell effector function, since antigen density correlates with T-cell activation. Here we designed a pipeline (Figure 1) to identify unique surface antigens expressed in T-ALL using proteomic and transcriptomic analyses followed by flow cytometry validation, and functional studies with CAR T cells targeting the identified antigens. We generated an Illumina total stranded RNAseq library from healthy donor myeloid and lymphoid cells of bone marrow, peripheral blood and cord blood (N= 116). We compared data to 265 St. Jude pediatric T-ALL samples and against 53 normal tissue expression data from the GTEx (Genotype-Tissue Expression) project. To analyze the T-cell surface proteome, we isolated plasma membrane fractions from 11 samples including healthy T-cells and T-ALL cell lines using a differential centrifugation-based method. The purity of the plasma membrane fraction was confirmed by western blot. Na+/K+ ATPase and GAPDH were used as controls for the plasma membrane and cytosolic fractions respectively. Following plasma membrane enrichment, the membrane proteins were applied for proteomic analysis using an advanced TMT-L/LC-MS/MS pipeline, and the acquired proteomic data were further processed via the JUMP software suite. 997 unique proteins were quantified from the membrane fractions. Integrated analysis the transcriptomic and proteomic datasets showed significant correlation and yielded a list of candidate genes, which were validated by flow cytometry on a panel of T-ALL cell lines (CCRF, RPMI8402, and MOLT3) and resting and activated T-cells from healthy donors. We identified GRP78 as one of the differentially expressed cell surface antigens and further confirmed its expression on additional T-ALL cell lines (KE37, PF382, PEER, CEMC7) and 3 PDX samples. Finally, we generated GRP78-CAR T cells and demonstrate that GRP78-CAR T cells recognize and kill GRP78+ T-ALL cells and have potent antitumor activity in xenograft and PDX models. We have established an unbiased pipeline to identify differentially expressed antigens on the cell surface of T-ALL blasts and created a healthy tissue RNAseq library. The results from our analyses are encouraging and interrogation of our pipeline has yielded differentially expressed immunotherapy targets for the treatment of relapsed refractory T-ALL. Our results highlight the importance of integrated surface proteomics and transcriptomics analysis. Figure 1: Outline of strategy for target selection: Figure Disclosures Hebbar: St. Jude: Patents & Royalties. Epperly:St. Jude: Patents & Royalties. Gottschalk:Inmatics and Tidal: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; TESSA Therapeutics: Other: research collaboration; Patents and patent applications in the fields of T-cell & Gene therapy for cancer: Patents & Royalties; Merck and ViraCyte: Consultancy. Mullighan:AbbVie, Inc.: Research Funding; Illumina: Consultancy, Honoraria, Speakers Bureau; Pfizer: Honoraria, Research Funding, Speakers Bureau. Velasquez:Rally! Foundation: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; St. Jude: Patents & Royalties.


2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 2475-2487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Apolloni ◽  
Ian A. Prior ◽  
Margaret Lindsay ◽  
Robert G. Parton ◽  
John F. Hancock

ABSTRACT Ras proteins must be localized to the inner surface of the plasma membrane to be biologically active. The motifs that effect Ras plasma membrane targeting consist of a C-terminal CAAX motif plus a second signal comprising palmitoylation of adjacent cysteine residues or the presence of a polybasic domain. In this study, we examined how Ras proteins access the cell surface after processing of the CAAX motif is completed in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We show that palmitoylated CAAX proteins, in addition to being localized at the plasma membrane, are found throughout the exocytic pathway and accumulate in the Golgi region when cells are incubated at 15°C. In contrast, polybasic CAAX proteins are found only at the cell surface and not in the exocytic pathway. CAAX proteins which lack a second signal for plasma membrane targeting accumulate in the ER and Golgi. Brefeldin A (BFA) significantly inhibits the plasma membrane accumulation of newly synthesized, palmitoylated CAAX proteins without inhibiting their palmitoylation. BFA has no effect on the trafficking of polybasic CAAX proteins. We conclude that H-ras and K-ras traffic to the cell surface through different routes and that the polybasic domain is a sorting signal diverting K-Ras out of the classical exocytic pathway proximal to the Golgi. Farnesylated Ras proteins that lack a polybasic domain reach the Golgi but require palmitoylation in order to traffic further to the cell surface. These data also indicate that a Ras palmitoyltransferase is present in an early compartment of the exocytic pathway.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1718-1718
Author(s):  
Karin Fischer ◽  
Simon Voelkl ◽  
Jana Berger ◽  
Reinhard Andreesen ◽  
Thomas Pomorski ◽  
...  

Abstract In eukaryotic cells the phospholipid phosphatidylserine (PS) is restricted to the inner plasma membrane leaflet. This lipid asymmetry which is maintained by the concerted action of phospholipid transport proteins is mainly lost during apoptosis. Here, we demonstrate that primary human CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) expose PS upon T-cell receptor (TCR)-mediated antigen recognition: antigen-specific CTL, recognizing the HLA-A2 binding Melan-A peptide, demonstrated a marked exposure of PS as determined by annV-FITC staining, a highly specific PS-binding protein, after 4 h of stimulation with Melan-A-loaded antigen presenting cells (APC). PS exposure was Ag-specific (>80% annV-positive T cells) but control peptide (gp100)-pulsed and unpulsed APC also induced a slight background PS exposure on the CTL. To follow more precisely the fate of annV-positive CTL after antigen-specific stimulation, we labeled Melan-A-specific CTL with the membrane dye PKH-26 and isolated all annV+ PKH-26+ CTL 4 h after stimulation with peptide-pulsed APC cells by cell sorting. Results demonstrate that the annV-positive T-cell population is heterogenous: while the annV-high T-cell population retained the annV-high phenotype and consisted of apoptotic T cells, the annV-intermediate(int) T-cell population revealed a constant decrease of annV binding and became annV-negative at 54 to 72 h after stimulation. Using three independent assays for apoptosis we found that annV-int T cells are propidium iodide negative, do not exhibit DNA strand brakes and contain no active caspase 3. In contrast, annV-int CTL revealed a strongly activated phenotype indicated by an upregulation of CD69 expression and downregulation of the TCRαβ chain expression. Fluorescence microscopic analysis demonstrated that PS is distributed inhomogenously over the plasma membrane and concentrated in membrane lipid raft domains at the immunological synapse. By studying the activity of PS transport proteins using a fluorescence-labeled PS analogue, we determined a constitutive outward transfer of PS molecules in Melan-A-specific CTL. The constitutive PS outward transport was not further accelerated after antigen re-stimulation. In sharp contrast, the inward transporting flippase was strongly inhibited in stimulated CTL resulting in an accumulation of PS molecules on the cell surface. Shielding of exposed PS by annexinV protein during antigen recognition diminished cytokine secretion, activation and cell-cell clustering of antigen-specific CTL. In summary, our data demonstrate for the first time that externalized PS on antigen-stimulated CTL is linked to T-cell activation and probably involved in cell-cell contact formation at the immunological synapse.


1998 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 585-597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susana Gonzalo ◽  
Maurine E. Linder

Synaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25) is a palmitoylated membrane protein essential for neurotransmitter release from synaptic terminals. We used neuronal cell lines to study the biosynthesis and posttranslational processing of SNAP-25 to investigate how palmitoylation contributes to the subcellular localization of the protein. SNAP-25 was synthesized as a soluble protein that underwent palmitoylation approximately 20 min after synthesis. Palmitoylation of the protein coincided with its stable membrane association. Treatment of cells with brefeldin A or other disrupters of transport inhibited palmitoylation of newly synthesized SNAP-25 and abolished membrane association. These results demonstrate that the processing of SNAP-25 and its targeting to the plasma membrane depend on an intact transport mechanism along the exocytic pathway. The kinetics of SNAP-25 palmitoylation and membrane association and the sensitivity of these parameters to brefeldin A suggest a novel trafficking pathway for targeting proteins to the plasma membrane. In vitro, SNAP-25 stably associated with membranes was not released from the membrane after chemical deacylation. We propose that palmitoylation of SNAP-25 is required for initial membrane targeting of the protein but that other interactions can maintain membrane association in the absence of fatty acylation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 63
Author(s):  
Alice Bayiyana ◽  
Samuel Okurut ◽  
Rose Nabatanzi ◽  
Godfrey Zziwa ◽  
David R. Boulware ◽  
...  

Despite improvement in the prognosis of HIV/AIDS (human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immune deficiency syndrome) patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART), cryptococcal meningitis (CM) still causes 10–15% mortality among HIV-infected patients. The immunological impact of ART on the CD4+ and CD8+ T cell repertoire during cryptococcal co-infection is unclear. We determined longitudinal phenotypic changes in T cell subsets among patients with CM after they initiated ART. We hypothesized that ART alters the clonotypic phenotype and structural composition of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells during CM co-infection. For this substudy, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were isolated at four time points from CM patients following ART initiation during the parent study (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT01075152). Phenotypic characterization of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was done using T cell surface marker monoclonal antibodies by flow cytometry. There was variation in the expression of immunophenotypic markers defining central memory (CD27+CD45R0+), effector memory (CD45R0+CD27–), immune activation (CD38+ and Human Leucocyte Antigen DR (HLA-DR+), and exhaustion (Programmed cell death protein one (PD-1) in the CD4+ T cell subset. In comparison to the CD4+ T cell population, the CD8+ central memory subset declined gradually with minimal increase in the effector memory subset. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T cell immune exhaustion and activation markers remained elevated over 12 weeks. The relative surge and decline in the expression of T cell surface markers outlines a variation in the differentiation of CD4+ T cells during ART treatment during CM co-infection.


2002 ◽  
Vol 361 (2) ◽  
pp. 203-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia GINÉS ◽  
Marta MARIÑO ◽  
Josefa MALLOL ◽  
Enric I. CANELA ◽  
Chikao MORIMOTO ◽  
...  

The extra-enzymic function of cell-surface adenosine deaminase (ADA), an enzyme mainly localized in the cytosol but also found on the cell surface of monocytes, B cells and T cells, has lately been the subject of numerous studies. Cell-surface ADA is able to transduce co-stimulatory signals in T cells via its interaction with CD26, an integral membrane protein that acts as ADA-binding protein. The aim of the present study was to explore whether ADA—CD26 interaction plays a role in the adhesion of lymphocyte cells to human epithelial cells. To meet this aim, different lymphocyte cell lines (Jurkat and CEM T) expressing endogenous, or overexpressing human, CD26 protein were tested in adhesion assays to monolayers of colon adenocarcinoma human epithelial cells, Caco-2, which express high levels of cell-surface ADA. Interestingly, the adhesion of Jurkat and CEM T cells to a monolayer of Caco-2 cells was greatly dependent on CD26. An increase by 50% in the cell-to-cell adhesion was found in cells containing higher levels of CD26. Incubation with an anti-CD26 antibody raised against the ADA-binding site or with exogenous ADA resulted in a significant reduction (50–70%) of T-cell adhesion to monolayers of epithelial cells. The role of ADA—CD26 interaction in the lymphocyte—epithelial cell adhesion appears to be mediated by CD26 molecules that are not interacting with endogenous ADA (ADA-free CD26), since SKW6.4 (B cells) that express more cell-surface ADA showed lower adhesion than T cells. Adhesion stimulated by CD26 and ADA is mediated by T cell lymphocyte function-associated antigen. A role for ADA—CD26 interaction in cell-to-cell adhesion was confirmed further in integrin activation assays. FACS analysis revealed a higher expression of activated integrins on T cell lines in the presence of increasing amounts of exogenous ADA. Taken together, these results suggest that the ADA—CD26 interaction on the cell surface has a role in lymphocyte—epithelial cell adhesion.


2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (11) ◽  
pp. 5547-5560 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clare Jolly ◽  
Ivonne Mitar ◽  
Quentin J. Sattentau

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of CD4+ T cells leads to the production of new virions that assemble at the plasma membrane. Gag and Env accumulate in the context of lipid rafts at the inner and outer leaflets of the plasma membrane, respectively, forming polarized domains from which HIV-1 buds. HIV-1 budding can result in either release of cell-free virions or direct cell-cell spread via a virological synapse (VS). The recruitment of Gag and Env to these plasma membrane caps in T cells is poorly understood but may require elements of the T-cell secretory apparatus coordinated by the cytoskeleton. Using fixed-cell immunofluorescence labeling and confocal microscopy, we observed a high percentage of HIV-1-infected T cells with polarized Env and Gag in capped, lipid raft-like assembly domains. Treatment of infected T cells with inhibitors of actin or tubulin remodeling disrupted Gag and Env compartmentalization within the polarized raft-like domains. Depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton reduced Gag release and viral infectivity, and actin and tubulin inhibitors reduced Env incorporation into virions. Live- and fixed-cell confocal imaging and assay of de novo DNA synthesis by real-time PCR allowed quantification of HIV-1 cell-cell transfer. Inhibition of actin and tubulin remodeling in infected cells interfered with cell-cell spread across a VS and reduced new viral DNA synthesis. Based on these data, we propose that HIV-1 requires both actin and tubulin components of the T-cell cytoskeleton to direct its assembly and budding and to elaborate a functional VS.


2001 ◽  
Vol 276 (50) ◽  
pp. 47320-47328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Buslepp ◽  
Rui Zhao ◽  
Debora Donnini ◽  
Douglas Loftus ◽  
Mohamed Saad ◽  
...  

Recognition of virally infected cells by CD8+T cells requires differentiation between self and nonself peptide-class I major histocompatibility complexes (pMHC). Recognition of foreign pMHC by host T cells is a major factor in the rejection of transplanted organs from the same species (allotransplant) or different species (xenotransplant). AHIII12.2 is a murine T cell clone that recognizes the xenogeneic (human) class I MHC HLA-A2.1 molecule (A2) and the syngeneic murine class I MHC H-2 Dbmolecule (Db). Recognition of both A2 and Dbare peptide-dependent, and the sequences of the peptides recognized have been determined. Alterations in the antigenic peptides bound to A2 cause large changes in AHIII12.2 T cell responsiveness. Crystal structures of three representative peptides (agonist, null, and antagonist) bound to A2 partially explain the changes in AHIII12.2 responsiveness. Using class I pMHC octamers, a strong correlation is seen between T cell activity and the affinity of pMHC complexes for the T cell receptor. However, contrary to previous studies, we see similar half-lives for the pMHC multimers bound to the AHIII12.2 cell surface.


2003 ◽  
Vol 278 (22) ◽  
pp. 20389-20394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorian C. Hartgroves ◽  
Joseph Lin ◽  
Hanno Langen ◽  
Tobias Zech ◽  
Arthur Weiss ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Vânia Passos ◽  
Thomas Zillinger ◽  
Nicoletta Casartelli ◽  
Amelie S. Wachs ◽  
Shuting Xu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT When expressed in virus-producing cells, the cellular multipass transmembrane protein SERINC5 reduces the infectivity of HIV-1 particles and is counteracted by HIV-1 Nef. Due to the unavailability of an antibody of sufficient specificity and sensitivity, investigation of SERINC5 protein expression and subcellular localization has been limited to heterologously expressed SERINC5. We generated, via CRISPR/Cas9-assisted gene editing, Jurkat T-cell clones expressing endogenous SERINC5 bearing an extracellularly exposed hemagglutinin (HA) epitope [Jurkat SERINC5(iHA knock-in) T cells]. This modification enabled quantification of endogenous SERINC5 protein levels and demonstrated a predominant localization in lipid rafts. Interferon alpha (IFN-α) treatment enhanced cell surface levels of SERINC5 in a ruxolitinib-sensitive manner in the absence of modulation of mRNA and protein quantities. Parental and SERINC5(iHA knock-in) T cells shared the ability to produce infectious wild-type HIV-1 but not an HIV-1 Δnef mutant. SERINC5-imposed reduction of infectivity involved a modest reduction of virus fusogenicity. An association of endogenous SERINC5 protein with HIV-1 Δnef virions was consistently detectable as a 35-kDa species, as opposed to heterologous SERINC5, which presented as a 51-kDa species. Nef-mediated functional counteraction did not correlate with virion exclusion of SERINC5, arguing for the existence of additional counteractive mechanisms of Nef that act on virus-associated SERINC5. In HIV-1-infected cells, Nef triggered the internalization of SERINC5 in the absence of detectable changes of steady-state protein levels. These findings establish new properties of endogenous SERINC5 expression and subcellular localization, challenge existing concepts of HIV-1 Nef-mediated antagonism of SERINC5, and uncover an unprecedented role of IFN-α in modulating SERINC5 through accumulation at the cell surface. IMPORTANCE SERINC5 is the long-searched-for antiviral factor that is counteracted by the HIV-1 accessory gene product Nef. Here, we engineered, via CRISPR/Cas9 technology, T-cell lines that express endogenous SERINC5 alleles tagged with a knocked-in HA epitope. This genetic modification enabled us to study basic properties of endogenous SERINC5 and to verify proposed mechanisms of HIV-1 Nef-mediated counteraction of SERINC5. Using this unique resource, we identified the susceptibility of endogenous SERINC5 protein to posttranslational modulation by type I IFNs and suggest uncoupling of Nef-mediated functional antagonism from SERINC5 exclusion from virions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document