The chaperonin CCT8 controls proteostasis essential for T cell maturation, selection, and function.
Bergithe Eikeland OftedalStefano MaioAdam E HandelMadeleine P J WhiteDuncan HowieSimon DavisNicolas PrevotIoanna A RotaMary E DeadmanBenedikt Mathias KesslerRoman FischerNikolaus S TredeErdinc SezginRick M MaizelsGeorg A HollanderPublished in: Communications biology (2021)
T cells rely for their development and function on the correct folding and turnover of proteins generated in response to a broad range of molecular cues. In the absence of the eukaryotic type II chaperonin complex, CCT, T cell activation induced changes in the proteome are compromised including the formation of nuclear actin filaments and the formation of a normal cell stress response. Consequently, thymocyte maturation and selection, and T cell homeostatic maintenance and receptor-mediated activation are severely impaired. In the absence of CCT-controlled protein folding, Th2 polarization diverges from normal differentiation with paradoxical continued IFN-γ expression. As a result, CCT-deficient T cells fail to generate an efficient immune protection against helminths as they are unable to sustain a coordinated recruitment of the innate and adaptive immune systems. These findings thus demonstrate that normal T cell biology is critically dependent on CCT-controlled proteostasis and that its absence is incompatible with protective immunity.