Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Jan 2021)

Soluble CD83 Regulates Dendritic Cell–T Cell Immunological Synapse Formation by Disrupting Rab1a-Mediated F-Actin Rearrangement

  • Wei Lin,
  • Shuping Zhou,
  • Meng Feng,
  • Yong Yu,
  • Qinghong Su,
  • Xiaofan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2020.605713
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Dendritic cell–T cell (DC-T) contacts play an important role in T cell activation, clone generation, and development. Regulating the cytoskeletal protein rearrangement of DCs can modulate DC-T contact and affect T cell activation. However, inhibitory factors on cytoskeletal regulation in DCs remain poorly known. We showed that a soluble form of CD83 (sCD83) inhibited T cell activation by decreasing DC-T contact and synapse formation between DC and T cells. This negative effect of sCD83 on DCs was mediated by disruption of F-actin rearrangements, leading to alter expression and localization of major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) and immunological synapse formation between DC and T cells. Furthermore, sCD83 was found to decrease GTP-binding activity of Rab1a, which further decreased colocalization and expression of LRRK2 and F-actin rearrangements in DCs, leading to the loss of MHC-II at DC-T synapses and reduced DC-T synapse formation. Further, sCD83-treated DCs alleviated symptoms of experimental autoimmune uveitis in mice and decreased the number of T cells in the eyes and lymph nodes of these animals. Our findings demonstrate a novel signaling pathway of sCD83 on regulating DC-T contact, which may be harnessed to develop new immunosuppressive therapeutics for autoimmune disease.

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