Microtubules restrict F-actin polymerization to the immune synapse via GEF-H1 to maintain polarity in lymphocytes

0301 basic medicine B-Lymphocytes 0303 health sciences QH301-705.5 Science immune synapse Q R cytoskeleton Cell Biology Microtubules Actins Polymerization cell polarity Mice 03 medical and health sciences Synapses Medicine Animals GEF-H1 Biology (General) Rho Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factors B lymphocytes
DOI: 10.7554/elife.78330 Publication Date: 2022-09-16T10:00:17Z
ABSTRACT
Immune synapse formation is a key step for lymphocyte activation. In B lymphocytes, the immune synapse controls the production of high-affinity antibodies, thereby defining the efficiency of humoral immune responses. While the key roles played by both the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons in the formation and function of the immune synapse have become increasingly clear, how the different events involved in synapse formation are coordinated in space and time by actin–microtubule interactions is not understood. Using a microfluidic pairing device, we studied with unprecedented resolution the dynamics of the various events leading to immune synapse formation and maintenance in murine B cells. Our results identify two groups of events, local and global, dominated by actin and microtubules dynamics, respectively. They further highlight an unexpected role for microtubules and the GEF-H1-RhoA axis in restricting F-actin polymerization at the lymphocyte–antigen contact site, thereby allowing the formation and maintenance of a unique competent immune synapse.
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