Login / Signup

A dynamic CD2-rich compartment at the outer edge of the immunological synapse boosts and integrates signals.

Philippos DemetriouEnas Abu ShahSalvatore ValvoSarah McCuaigViveka MayyaAudun KvalvaagThomas StarkeyKseniya KorobchevskayaLennard Y W LeeMatthias FriedrichElizabeth H MannMikhail A KutuzovMatteo MorottiNina WietekHeather RadaShamsideen YusufJehan AfroseAnastasios Siokisnull nullMichael Meyer-HermannAhmed Ashour AhmedDavid DepoilMichael L Dustin
Published in: Nature immunology (2020)
The CD2-CD58 recognition system promotes adhesion and signaling and counters exhaustion in human T cells. We found that CD2 localized to the outer edge of the mature immunological synapse, with cellular or artificial APC, in a pattern we refer to as a 'CD2 corolla'. The corolla captured engaged CD28, ICOS, CD226 and SLAM-F1 co-stimulators. The corolla amplified active phosphorylated Src-family kinases (pSFK), LAT and PLC-γ over T cell receptor (TCR) alone. CD2-CD58 interactions in the corolla boosted signaling by 77% as compared with central CD2-CD58 interactions. Engaged PD-1 invaded the CD2 corolla and buffered CD2-mediated amplification of TCR signaling. CD2 numbers and motifs in its cytoplasmic tail controlled corolla formation. CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes displayed low expression of CD2 in the majority of people with colorectal, endometrial or ovarian cancer. CD2 downregulation may attenuate antitumor T cell responses, with implications for checkpoint immunotherapies.
Keyphrases
  • nk cells
  • escherichia coli
  • endothelial cells
  • cell proliferation
  • oxidative stress
  • dna damage
  • signaling pathway
  • cystic fibrosis
  • dendritic cells
  • regulatory t cells
  • cell cycle