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WNK1 kinase balances T cell adhesion versus migration in vivo.

Robert KöchlFlavian ThelenLesley VanesTiago F BrazãoKathryn FountainJian XieChou-Long HuangRuth LyckJens V SteinVictor L J Tybulewicz
Published in: Nature immunology (2016)
Adhesion and migration of T cells are controlled by chemokines and by adhesion molecules, especially integrins, and have critical roles in the normal physiological function of T lymphocytes. Using an RNA-mediated interference screen, we identified the WNK1 kinase as a regulator of both integrin-mediated adhesion and T cell migration. We found that WNK1 is a negative regulator of integrin-mediated adhesion, whereas it acts as a positive regulator of migration via the kinases OXSR1 and STK39 and the ion co-transporter SLC12A2. WNK1-deficient T cells home less efficiently to lymphoid organs and migrate more slowly through them. Our results reveal that a pathway previously known only to regulate salt homeostasis in the kidney functions to balance T cell adhesion and migration.
Keyphrases
  • cell adhesion
  • cell migration
  • transcription factor
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  • tyrosine kinase
  • protein kinase
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  • single cell
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  • candida albicans