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Exocrine gland-resident memory CD8 + T cells use mechanosensing for tissue surveillance.

Nora RuefJose Martínez MagdalenoXenia FichtVladimir PurvanovMatthieu PalayretStefanie WissmannPetra PfenningerBettina StolpFlavian ThelenJuliana Barreto de AlburquerquePhilipp GermannJames SharpeJun AbeDaniel F LeglerJens V Stein
Published in: Science immunology (2023)
Tissue-resident CD8 + T cells (T RM ) continuously scan peptide-MHC (pMHC) complexes in their organ of residence to intercept microbial invaders. Recent data showed that T RM lodged in exocrine glands scan tissue in the absence of any chemoattractant or adhesion receptor signaling, thus bypassing the requirement for canonical migration-promoting factors. The signals eliciting this noncanonical motility and its relevance for organ surveillance have remained unknown. Using mouse models of viral infections, we report that exocrine gland T RM autonomously generated front-to-back F-actin flow for locomotion, accompanied by high cortical actomyosin contractility, and leading-edge bleb formation. The distinctive mode of exocrine gland T RM locomotion was triggered by sensing physical confinement and was closely correlated with nuclear deformation, which acts as a mechanosensor via an arachidonic acid and Ca 2+ signaling pathway. By contrast, naïve CD8 + T cells or T RM surveilling microbe-exposed epithelial barriers did not show mechanosensing capacity. Inhibition of nuclear mechanosensing disrupted exocrine gland T RM scanning and impaired their ability to intercept target cells. These findings indicate that confinement is sufficient to elicit autonomous T cell surveillance in glands with restricted chemokine expression and constitutes a scanning strategy that complements chemosensing-dependent migration.
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