Login / Signup

Proteomic analysis in primary T cells reveals IL-7 alters T cell receptor thresholding via CYTIP/cytohesin/LFA-1 localisation and activation.

Rayner M L QueirozSiân C PiperJohanna S ReesSam StricksonEmmanuel BriendChoon Pei LowG John FergusonKathryn S LilleyAntony P JacksonDonna K Finch
Published in: The Biochemical journal (2022)
The ability of the cellular immune system to discriminate self from foreign antigens depends on the appropriate calibration of the T cell receptor (TCR) signalling threshold. The lymphocyte homeostatic cytokine interleukin 7 (IL-7) is known to affect TCR thresholding, but the molecular mechanism is not fully elucidated. A better understanding of this process is highly relevant in the context of autoimmune disease therapy and cancer immunotherapy. We sought to characterise the early signalling events attributable to IL-7 priming; in particular, the altered phosphorylation of signal transduction proteins and their molecular localisation to the TCR. By integrating high-resolution proximity- phospho-proteomic and imaging approaches using primary T cells, rather than engineered cell lines or an in vitro expanded T cell population, we uncovered transduction events previously not linked to IL-7. We show that IL-7 leads to dephosphorylation of cytohesin interacting protein (CYTIP) at a hitherto undescribed phosphorylation site (pThr280) and alters the co-localisation of cytohesin-1 with the TCR and LFA-1 integrin. These results show that IL-7, acting via CYTIP and cytohesin-1, may impact TCR activation thresholds by enhancing the co-clustering of TCR and LFA-1 integrin.
Keyphrases
  • regulatory t cells
  • high resolution
  • multiple sclerosis
  • stem cells
  • protein kinase
  • mass spectrometry
  • rna seq
  • drug induced
  • peripheral blood
  • single molecule
  • smoking cessation
  • cell adhesion
  • liquid chromatography