DOCK8 regulates lymphocyte shape integrity for skin antiviral immunity

Qian Zhang(National Institutes of Health), Christopher G. Dove(National Institutes of Health), Jyh Liang Hor(The University of Melbourne), H. Moses Murdock(National Institutes of Health), Dara M. Strauss‐Albee(National Institutes of Health), Jordan Garcia(National Institutes of Health), Judith N. Mandl(National Institutes of Health), Rachael A. Grodick(National Institutes of Health), Huie Jing(National Institutes of Health), Devon Chandler‐Brown(National Institutes of Health), Timothy E. Lenardo(National Institutes of Health), Greg Crawford(University of Oxford), Helen Matthews(National Institutes of Health), Alexandra F. Freeman(National Institutes of Health), Richard J. Cornall(University of Oxford), Ronald N. Germain(National Institutes of Health), Scott N. Mueller(The University of Melbourne), Helen C. Su(National Institutes of Health)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
November 24, 2014
Cited by 170Open Access
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Abstract

DOCK8 mutations result in an inherited combined immunodeficiency characterized by increased susceptibility to skin and other infections. We show that when DOCK8-deficient T and NK cells migrate through confined spaces, they develop cell shape and nuclear deformation abnormalities that do not impair chemotaxis but contribute to a distinct form of catastrophic cell death we term cytothripsis. Such defects arise during lymphocyte migration in collagen-dense tissues when DOCK8, through CDC42 and p21-activated kinase (PAK), is unavailable to coordinate cytoskeletal structures. Cytothripsis of DOCK8-deficient cells prevents the generation of long-lived skin-resident memory CD8 T cells, which in turn impairs control of herpesvirus skin infections. Our results establish that DOCK8-regulated shape integrity of lymphocytes prevents cytothripsis and promotes antiviral immunity in the skin.


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