Cutting Edge: Piezo1 Mechanosensors Optimize Human T Cell Activation

Chinky Shiu Chen Liu(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Deblina Raychaudhuri(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Barnali Paul(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Yogaditya Chakrabarty(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Amrit Raj Ghosh(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Oindrila Rahaman(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Arindam Talukdar(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology), Dipyaman Ganguly(Indian Institute of Chemical Biology)
The Journal of Immunology
January 12, 2018
Cited by 165

Abstract

Abstract TCRs recognize peptides on MHC molecules and induce downstream signaling, leading to activation and clonal expansion. In addition to the strength of the interaction of TCRs with peptides on MHC molecules, mechanical forces contribute to optimal T cell activation, as reflected by the superior efficiency of immobilized TCR–cross-linking Abs compared with soluble Abs in TCR triggering, although a dedicated mechanotransduction module is not identified. We found that the professional mechanosensor protein Piezo1 is critically involved in human T cell activation. Although a deficiency in Piezo1 attenuates downstream events on ex vivo TCR triggering, a Piezo1 agonist can obviate the need to immobilize TCR–cross-linking Abs. Piezo1-driven Ca2+ influx, leading to calpain activation and organization of cortical actin scaffold, links this mechanosensor to optimal TCR signaling. Thus, we discovered a hitherto unknown regulatory mechanism for human T cell activation and provide the first evidence, to our knowledge, for the involvement of Piezo1 mechanosensors in immune regulation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis