| Literature DB >> 30650373 |
ChangDong Lin1, YouHua Zhang1, Kun Zhang1, YaJuan Zheng1, Ling Lu1, HaiShuang Chang2, Hui Yang2, YanRong Yang1, YaoYing Wan1, ShiHui Wang1, MengYa Yuan1, ZhanJun Yan3, RongGuang Zhang2, YongNing He2, GaoXiang Ge1, Dianqing Wu4, JianFeng Chen5.
Abstract
Fever is an evolutionarily conserved response that confers survival benefits during infection. However, the underlying mechanism remains obscure. Here, we report that fever promoted T lymphocyte trafficking through heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90)-induced α4 integrin activation and signaling in T cells. By inducing selective binding of Hsp90 to α4 integrins, but not β2 integrins, fever increased α4-integrin-mediated T cell adhesion and transmigration. Mechanistically, Hsp90 bound to the α4 tail and activated α4 integrins via inside-out signaling. Moreover, the N and C termini of one Hsp90 molecule simultaneously bound to two α4 tails, leading to dimerization and clustering of α4 integrins on the cell membrane and subsequent activation of the FAK-RhoA pathway. Abolishment of Hsp90-α4 interaction inhibited fever-induced T cell trafficking to draining lymph nodes and impaired the clearance of bacterial infection. Our findings identify the Hsp90-α4-integrin axis as a thermal sensory pathway that promotes T lymphocyte trafficking and enhances immune surveillance during infection.Entities:
Keywords: Hsp90; fever; lymphocyte trafficking; thermal stress; α4 integrins
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30650373 PMCID: PMC6432644 DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2018.11.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunity ISSN: 1074-7613 Impact factor: 31.745