Biochemistry and Pharmacology - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 9 of 9
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    RNF41 regulates the damage recognition receptor Clec9A and antigen cross-presentation in mouse dendritic cells
    Tullett, KM ; Tan, PS ; Park, H-Y ; Schittenhelm, RB ; Michael, N ; Li, R ; Policheni, AN ; Gruber, E ; Huang, C ; Fulcher, AJ ; Danne, JC ; Czabotar, PE ; Wakim, LM ; Mintern, JD ; Ramm, G ; Radford, KJ ; Caminschi, I ; O'Keeffe, M ; Villadangos, JA ; Wright, MD ; Blewitt, ME ; Heath, WR ; Shortman, K ; Purcell, AW ; Nicola, NA ; Zhang, J-G ; Lahoud, MH (ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2020-12-02)
    The dendritic cell receptor Clec9A facilitates processing of dead cell-derived antigens for cross-presentation and the induction of effective CD8+ T cell immune responses. Here, we show that this process is regulated by E3 ubiquitin ligase RNF41 and define a new ubiquitin-mediated mechanism for regulation of Clec9A, reflecting the unique properties of Clec9A as a receptor specialized for delivery of antigens for cross-presentation. We reveal RNF41 is a negative regulator of Clec9A and the cross-presentation of dead cell-derived antigens by mouse dendritic cells. Intriguingly, RNF41 regulates the downstream fate of Clec9A by directly binding and ubiquitinating the extracellular domains of Clec9A. At steady-state, RNF41 ubiquitination of Clec9A facilitates interactions with ER-associated proteins and degradation machinery to control Clec9A levels. However, Clec9A interactions are altered following dead cell uptake to favor antigen presentation. These findings provide important insights into antigen cross-presentation and have implications for development of approaches to modulate immune responses.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Alveolar macrophages are epigenetically altered after inflammation, leading to long-term lung immunoparalysis
    Roquilly, A ; Jacqueline, C ; Davieau, M ; Molle, A ; Sadek, A ; Fourgeux, C ; Rooze, P ; Broquet, A ; Misme-Aucouturier, B ; Chaumette, T ; Vourc'h, M ; Cinotti, R ; Marec, N ; Gauttier, V ; McWilliam, HEG ; Altare, F ; Poschmann, J ; Villadangos, JA ; Asehnoune, K (Nature Research, 2020-05-18)
    Sepsis and trauma cause inflammation and elevated susceptibility to hospital-acquired pneumonia. As phagocytosis by macrophages plays a critical role in the control of bacteria, we investigated the phagocytic activity of macrophages after resolution of inflammation. After resolution of primary pneumonia, murine alveolar macrophages (AMs) exhibited poor phagocytic capacity for several weeks. These paralyzed AMs developed from resident AMs that underwent an epigenetic program of tolerogenic training. Such adaptation was not induced by direct encounter of the pathogen but by secondary immunosuppressive signals established locally upon resolution of primary infection. Signal-regulatory protein α (SIRPα) played a critical role in the establishment of the microenvironment that induced tolerogenic training. In humans with systemic inflammation, AMs and also circulating monocytes still displayed alterations consistent with reprogramming six months after resolution of inflammation. Antibody blockade of SIRPα restored phagocytosis in monocytes of critically ill patients in vitro, which suggests a potential strategy to prevent hospital-acquired pneumonia.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Organ-specific isoform selection of fatty acid-binding proteins in tissue-resident lymphocytes
    Frizzell, H ; Fonseca, R ; Christo, SN ; Evrard, M ; Cruz-Gomez, S ; Zanluqui, NG ; von Scheidt, B ; Freestone, D ; Park, SL ; McWilliam, HEG ; Villadangos, JA ; Carbone, FR ; Mackay, LK (AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE, 2020-04)
    Tissue-resident memory T (TRM) cells exist throughout the body, where they are poised to mediate local immune responses. Although studies have defined a common mechanism of residency independent of location, there is likely to be a level of specialization that adapts TRM cells to their given tissue of lodgment. It has been shown that TRM cells in the skin rely on the uptake of exogenous fatty acids for their survival and up-regulate fatty acid-binding protein 4 (FABP4) and FABP5 as part of their transcriptional program. However, FABPs exist as a larger family of isoforms, with different members selected in a tissue-specific fashion that is optimized for local fatty acid availability. Here, we show that although TRM cells in a range of tissue widely express FABPs, they are not restricted to FABP4 and FABP5. Instead, TRM cells show varying patterns of isoform usage that are determined by tissue-derived factors. These patterns are malleable because TRM cells relocated to different organs modify their FABP expression in line with their new location. As a consequence, these results argue for tissue-specific overlays to the TRM cell residency program, including FABP expression that is tailored to the particular tissue of TRM cell lodgment.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Butyrophilin 2A1 is essential for phosphoantigen reactivity by gamma delta T cells
    Rigau, M ; Ostrouska, S ; Fulford, TS ; Johnson, DN ; Woods, K ; Ruan, Z ; McWilliam, HEG ; Hudson, C ; Tutuka, C ; Wheatley, AK ; Kent, SJ ; Villadangos, JA ; Pal, B ; Kurts, C ; Simmonds, J ; Pelzing, M ; Nash, AD ; Hammet, A ; Verhagen, AM ; Vairo, G ; Maraskovsky, E ; Panousis, C ; Gherardin, NA ; Cebon, J ; Godfrey, DI ; Behren, A ; Uldrich, AP (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2020-02-07)
    Gamma delta (γδ) T cells are essential to protective immunity. In humans, most γδ T cells express Vγ9Vδ2+ T cell receptors (TCRs) that respond to phosphoantigens (pAgs) produced by cellular pathogens and overexpressed by cancers. However, the molecular targets recognized by these γδTCRs are unknown. Here, we identify butyrophilin 2A1 (BTN2A1) as a key ligand that binds to the Vγ9+ TCR γ chain. BTN2A1 associates with another butyrophilin, BTN3A1, and these act together to initiate responses to pAg. Furthermore, binding of a second ligand, possibly BTN3A1, to a separate TCR domain incorporating Vδ2 is also required. This distinctive mode of Ag-dependent T cell activation advances our understanding of diseases involving pAg recognition and creates opportunities for the development of γδ T cell-based immunotherapies.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Absence of mucosal-associated invariant T cells in a person with a homozygous point mutation in MR1
    Howson, LJ ; Awad, W ; von Borstel, A ; Lim, HJ ; McWilliam, HEG ; Sandoval-Romero, ML ; Majumdar, S ; Hamzeh, AR ; Andrews, TD ; McDermott, DH ; Murphy, PM ; Le Nours, J ; Mak, JYW ; Liu, L ; Fairlie, DP ; McCluskey, J ; Villadangos, JA ; Cook, MC ; Turner, SJ ; Davey, MS ; Ojaimi, S ; Rossjohn, J (American Association for the Advancement of Science, 2020-07-10)
    The role unconventional T cells play in protective immunity in humans is unclear. Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are an unconventional T cell subset restricted to the antigen-presenting molecule MR1. Here, we report the discovery of a patient homozygous for a rare Arg31His (R9H in the mature protein) mutation in MR1 who has a history of difficult-to-treat viral and bacterial infections. MR1R9H was unable to present the potent microbially derived MAIT cell stimulatory ligand. The MR1R9H crystal structure revealed that the stimulatory ligand cannot bind due to the mutation lying within, and causing structural perturbation to, the ligand-binding domain of MR1. While MR1R9H could bind and be up-regulated by a MAIT cell inhibitory ligand, the patient lacked circulating MAIT cells. This shows the importance of the stimulatory ligand for MAIT cell selection in humans. The patient had an expanded γδ T cell population, indicating a compensatory interplay between these unconventional T cell subsets.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    Alveolar macrophages are epigenetically altered after inflammation, leading to long-term lung immunoparalysis (vol 21, pg 636, 2020)
    Roquilly, A ; Jacqueline, C ; Davieau, M ; Molle, A ; Sadek, A ; Fourgeux, C ; Rooze, P ; Broquet, A ; Misme-Aucouturier, B ; Chaumette, T ; Vourc'h, M ; Cinotti, R ; Marec, N ; Gauttier, V ; McWilliam, HEG ; Altare, F ; Poschmann, J ; Villadangos, JA ; Asehnoune, K (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2020-08)
    An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    MR1: a multi-faceted metabolite sensor for T cell activation
    McWilliam, HEG ; Villadangos, JA (Elsevier, 2020-06-01)
    The major histocompatibility complex class I-related molecule MR1 captures and presents small metabolites to MR1- restricted T cells including Mucosal Associated Invariant T (MAIT) cells. The first MR1 ligands discovered were intermediates of microbial riboflavin synthesis, antigens presented to alert inflammatory MAIT cells to bacterial infection. Recent advances have expanded the range of MR1 ligands to include extracellular metabolites released by the commensal microbiome, and yet undefined antigens presented by cancer cells to mediate MR1-dependent anti-tumor activity. MR1 thus exhibits a multifaceted ability to display a diverse range of ligands for immune surveillance in a variety of contexts. The mechanisms of antigen presentation by MR1 are of central importance to understanding metabolite-mediated immune homeostasis, immunity to infection and tumor surveillance.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Endoplasmic reticulum chaperones stabilize ligand-receptive MR1 molecules for efficient presentation of metabolite antigens
    McWilliam, HEG ; Mak, JYW ; Awad, W ; Zorkau, M ; Cruz-Gomez, S ; Lim, HJ ; Yan, Y ; Wormald, S ; Dagley, LF ; Eckle, SBG ; Corbett, AJ ; Liu, H ; Li, S ; Reddiex, SJJ ; Mintern, JD ; Liu, L ; McCluskey, J ; Rossjohn, J ; Fairlie, DP ; Villadangos, JA (NATL ACAD SCIENCES, 2020-10-06)
    The antigen-presenting molecule MR1 (MHC class I-related protein 1) presents metabolite antigens derived from microbial vitamin B2 synthesis to activate mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells. Key aspects of this evolutionarily conserved pathway remain uncharacterized, including where MR1 acquires ligands and what accessory proteins assist ligand binding. We answer these questions by using a fluorophore-labeled stable MR1 antigen analog, a conformation-specific MR1 mAb, proteomic analysis, and a genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 library screen. We show that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) contains a pool of two unliganded MR1 conformers stabilized via interactions with chaperones tapasin and tapasin-related protein. This pool is the primary source of MR1 molecules for the presentation of exogenous metabolite antigens to MAIT cells. Deletion of these chaperones reduces the ER-resident MR1 pool and hampers antigen presentation and MAIT cell activation. The MR1 antigen-presentation pathway thus co-opts ER chaperones to fulfill its unique ability to present exogenous metabolite antigens captured within the ER.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Virus-Mediated Suppression of the Antigen Presentation Molecule MR1
    McSharry, BP ; Samer, C ; McWilliam, HEG ; Ashley, CL ; Yee, MB ; Steain, M ; Liu, L ; Fairlie, DP ; Kinchington, PR ; McCluskey, J ; Abendroth, A ; Villadangos, JA ; Rossjohn, J ; Slobedman, B (CELL PRESS, 2020-03-03)
    The antigen-presenting molecule MR1 presents microbial metabolites related to vitamin B2 biosynthesis to mucosal-associated invariant T cells (MAIT cells). Although bacteria and fungi drive the MR1 biosynthesis pathway, viruses have not previously been implicated in MR1 expression or its antigen presentation. We demonstrate that several herpesviruses inhibit MR1 cell surface upregulation, including a potent inhibition by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). This virus profoundly suppresses MR1 cell surface expression and targets the molecule for proteasomal degradation, whereas ligand-induced cell surface expression of MR1 prior to infection enables MR1 to escape HSV-1-dependent targeting. HSV-1 downregulation of MR1 is dependent on de novo viral gene expression, and we identify the Us3 viral gene product as functioning to target MR1. Furthermore, HSV-1 downregulation of MR1 disrupts MAIT T cell receptor (TCR) activation. Accordingly, virus-mediated targeting of MR1 defines an immunomodulatory strategy that functionally disrupts the MR1-MAIT TCR axis.