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Five Inhibitory Receptors Display Distinct Vesicular Distributions in Murine T Cells

Authors :
Jiahe Lu
Alisa Veler
Boris Simonetti
Timsse Raj
Po Han Chou
Stephen J. Cross
Alexander M. Phillips
Xiongtao Ruan
Lan Huynh
Andrew W. Dowsey
Dingwei Ye
Robert F. Murphy
Paul Verkade
Peter J. Cullen
Christoph Wülfing
Source :
Cells, Vol 12, Iss 21, p 2558 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2023.

Abstract

T cells can express multiple inhibitory receptors. Upon induction of T cell exhaustion in response to a persistent antigen, prominently in the anti-tumor immune response, many are expressed simultaneously. Key inhibitory receptors are CTLA-4, PD-1, LAG3, TIM3, and TIGIT, as investigated here. These receptors are important as central therapeutic targets in cancer immunotherapy. Inhibitory receptors are not constitutively expressed on the cell surface, but substantial fractions reside in intracellular vesicular structures. It remains unresolved to which extent the subcellular localization of different inhibitory receptors is distinct. Using quantitative imaging of subcellular distributions and plasma membrane insertion as complemented by proximity proteomics and biochemical analysis of the association of the inhibitory receptors with trafficking adaptors, the subcellular distributions of the five inhibitory receptors were discrete. The distribution of CTLA-4 was most distinct, with preferential association with lysosomal-derived vesicles and the sorting nexin 1/2/5/6 transport machinery. With a lack of evidence for the existence of specific vesicle subtypes to explain divergent inhibitory receptor distributions, we suggest that such distributions are driven by divergent trafficking through an overlapping joint set of vesicular structures. This extensive characterization of the subcellular localization of five inhibitory receptors in relation to each other lays the foundation for the molecular investigation of their trafficking and its therapeutic exploitation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734409
Volume :
12
Issue :
21
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Cells
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.243134714943f4b979a7673d47dd5c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12212558