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Phostensin enables lymphocyte integrin activation and population of peripheral lymphoid organs

Authors :
Ho-Sup Lee
Hao Sun
Frédéric Lagarrigue
Sarah Hyun Ji Kim
Jay W. Fox
Nicholas E. Sherman
Alexandre R. Gingras
Mark H. Ginsberg
Source :
The Journal of experimental medicine, vol 219, iss 8
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

Rap1 GTPase drives assembly of the Mig-10/RIAM/Lamellipodin (MRL protein)–integrin–talin (MIT) complex that enables integrin-dependent lymphocyte functions. Here we used tandem affinity tag–based proteomics to isolate and analyze the MIT complex and reveal that Phostensin (Ptsn), a regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1, is a component of the complex. Ptsn mediates dephosphorylation of Rap1, thereby preserving the activity and membrane localization of Rap1 to stabilize the MIT complex. CRISPR/Cas9-induced deletion of PPP1R18, which encodes Ptsn, markedly suppresses integrin activation in Jurkat human T cells. We generated apparently healthy Ppp1r18−/− mice that manifest lymphocytosis and reduced population of peripheral lymphoid tissues ascribable, in part, to defective activation of integrins αLβ2 and α4β7. Ppp1r18−/− T cells exhibit reduced capacity to induce colitis in a murine adoptive transfer model. Thus, Ptsn enables lymphocyte integrin-mediated functions by dephosphorylating Rap1 to stabilize the MIT complex. As a consequence, loss of Ptsn ameliorates T cell–mediated colitis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of experimental medicine, vol 219, iss 8
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10ed27ef02865af2622772a324cdc8fe