Back to Search Start Over

Contrasting cytoskeletal regulation of MHC class II peptide presentation by human B cells or dendritic cells

Authors :
Nuala Mooney
Anne Galy
Laurence Jeanson Leh
Dominique Charron
Catherine Gelin
Eric Assier
Alix Delaguillaumie
Viviana Marin-Esteban
Niclas Setterblad
Source :
European Journal of Immunology. 38:1096-1105
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Wiley, 2008.

Abstract

MHC class II-mediated antigen presentation by B lymphocytes or dendritic cells (DC) initiates CD4+ T lymphocyte activation. In B lymphocytes, MHC class II peptide presentation has been characterised by recruitment of MHC class II, F-actin and lipid rafts to the B cell-T cell immunological synapse. We now show that MHC class II engagement in B lymphocytes induced lipid raft-independent Rho and Rac activation and that inhibition of either Rho-GTPase activation or actin polymerisation in the B cell abrogated T cell activation without altering B cell-T cell conjugate formation. Short-hairpin RNA studies excluded a role for the Cdc42 effector Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein. In contrast, antigen presentation by DC was Rho-GTPase-independent although actin was recruited to the DC-T cell interaction site. Moreover, actin depolymerisation in the DC significantly increased T cell activation without altering the number of DC-T cell conjugates. Finally we show that stable recruitment of HLA-DR to the site of the immunological synapse is not a uniform observation in DC and demonstrate reduced HLA-DR expression at the site of microtubule organising centre polarization. Therefore although actin accumulates in DC and B lymphocytes at the immunological synapse with antigen-specific T lymphocytes, this does not reflect comparable functional roles of their actin cytoskeletons in antigen presentation.

Details

ISSN :
15214141 and 00142980
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8e68986d5488036802351023978e0dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/eji.200737455