Antigen Availability and DOCK2-Driven Motility Govern CD4+ T Cell Interactions with Dendritic Cells In Vivo
Author(s) -
Markus Ackerknecht,
Kathrin Gollmer,
Philipp Germann,
Xenia Ficht,
Jun Abe,
Yoshinori Fukui,
Jim Swoger,
Jorge Ripoll,
James Sharpe,
Jens V. Stein
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1601148
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , motility , in vivo , antigen , chemistry , biology , immunology , genetics
Parenchymal migration of naive CD4 + T cells in lymph nodes (LNs) is mediated by the Rac activator DOCK2 and PI3Kγ and is widely assumed to facilitate efficient screening of dendritic cells (DCs) presenting peptide-MHCs (pMHCs). Yet how CD4 + T cell motility, DC density, and pMHC levels interdependently regulate such interactions has not been comprehensively examined. Using intravital imaging of reactive LNs in DC-immunized mice, we show that pMHC levels determined the occurrence and timing of stable CD4 + T cell-DC interactions. Despite the variability in interaction parameters, ensuing CD4 + T cell proliferation was comparable over a wide range of pMHC levels. Unexpectedly, decreased intrinsic motility of DOCK2 -/- CD4 + T cells did not impair encounters with DCs in dense paracortical networks and, instead, increased interaction stability, whereas PI3Kγ deficiency had no effect on interaction parameters. In contrast, intravital and whole-organ imaging showed that DOCK2-driven T cell motility was required to detach from pMHC low DCs and to find rare pMHC high DCs. In sum, our data uncover flexible signal integration by scanning CD4 + T cells, suggesting a search strategy evolved to detect low-frequency DCs presenting high cognate pMHC levels.
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