| Literature DB >> 26641718 |
Pablo Vargas1,2, Paolo Maiuri2, Marine Bretou1, Pablo J Sáez1, Paolo Pierobon1, Mathieu Maurin1, Mélanie Chabaud1, Danielle Lankar1, Dorian Obino1, Emmanuel Terriac2, Matthew Raab2, Hawa-Racine Thiam2, Thomas Brocker3, Susan M Kitchen-Goosen4, Arthur S Alberts4, Praveen Sunareni5, Sheng Xia5, Rong Li5, Raphael Voituriez6,7, Matthieu Piel2, Ana-Maria Lennon-Duménil1.
Abstract
Dendritic cell (DC) migration in peripheral tissues serves two main functions: antigen sampling by immature DCs, and chemokine-guided migration towards lymphatic vessels (LVs) on maturation. These migratory events determine the efficiency of the adaptive immune response. Their regulation by the core cell locomotion machinery has not been determined. Here, we show that the migration of immature DCs depends on two main actin pools: a RhoA-mDia1-dependent actin pool located at their rear, which facilitates forward locomotion; and a Cdc42-Arp2/3-dependent actin pool present at their front, which limits migration but promotes antigen capture. Following TLR4-MyD88-induced maturation, Arp2/3-dependent actin enrichment at the cell front is markedly reduced. Consequently, mature DCs switch to a faster and more persistent mDia1-dependent locomotion mode that facilitates chemotactic migration to LVs and lymph nodes. Thus, the differential use of actin-nucleating machineries optimizes the migration of immature and mature DCs according to their specific function.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26641718 PMCID: PMC5885286 DOI: 10.1038/ncb3284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Cell Biol ISSN: 1465-7392 Impact factor: 28.824