| Literature DB >> 31413071 |
Huw Colin-York1, Sudha Kumari2, Liliana Barbieri1, Lena Cords1, Marco Fritzsche3,4.
Abstract
Cytoskeletal actin dynamics are crucial for the activation of T-cells. Immortalised Jurkat T-cells have been the model system of choice to examine and correlate the dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton and the immunological synapse leading to T-cell activation. However, it has remained unclear whether immortalised cellular systems, such as Jurkat T-cells can recapitulate the cytoskeletal behaviour of primary T-cells. Studies delineating the cytoskeletal behaviour of Jurkat T-cells in comparison to primary T-cells are lacking. Here, we employ live-cell super-resolution microscopy to investigate the cytoskeletal actin organisation and dynamics of living primary and immortalised Jurkat T-cells at the appropriate spatiotemporal resolution. Under comparable activation conditions, we found differences in the architectural organisation and dynamics of Jurkat and primary mouse and human T-cells. Although the three main actin network architectures in Jurkat T-cells were reminiscent of primary T-cells, there were differences in the organisation and molecular mechanisms underlying these networks. Our results highlight mechanistic distinctions in the T-cell model system most utilised to study cytoskeletal actin dynamics.Entities:
Keywords: Actin cytoskeleton; Immune synapse; Jurkat cells; Primary T-cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31413071 PMCID: PMC6898998 DOI: 10.1242/jcs.232322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Sci ISSN: 0021-9533 Impact factor: 5.285
Fig. 1.Distinct actin cytoskeleton architecture in primary and immortalised T-cells. (A–C) Representative TIRF-SIM images of fixed human CD4+ T-cells fluorescently labelled with phalloidin-Alexa-488 (A), live mouse CD4+ T-cells expressing F-actin (Lifeact-GFP; B), and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells expressing Lifeact-citrine at the basal membrane (C) showing the dynamics within 3 min after contact with the activating SLB. The three characteristic F-actin architectures lamellipodium (red arrows), lamellum (blue arrows) and ramified actin network (white arrow) are visible in the three T-cell types. (D) Geometric size analysis of the contact interface in human, mouse and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells in response to the activating SLB. Quantitative differences were observed in the geometric size analysis when comparing Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (blue) with primary human CD4+ (green) and mouse CD4+ T-cells (red) (***P<0.0001) but not between primary human CD4+ and mouse CD4+ T-cells (NS, P>0.9). (E) Analysis of the lamellipodial leading edge curvature for both primary mouse CD4+ and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells after contact with the activating SLB. Quantitative differences were observed when comparing Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (blue) with primary mouse CD4+ T-cells (red); ***P<0.0001. Further details are provided in the text. All scale bars: 5 µm.
Significant references for F-actin structures and protrusions, in human, mouse and Jurkat CD4
Fig. 2.Distinct actin cytoskeleton dynamics in primary and immortalised T-cells. (A) Kymographs comparing F-actin-expressing live mouse (Lifeact-GFP, white arrows) and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (Lifeact-citrine) at the basal membrane within 3 min after contact with the activating SLB with and without fluorescent label of anti-CD3-Alexa-568 (red arrow). (B) Kymographs comparing live mouse and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells expressing F-actin show immobile F-actin features (white arrows), dynamic F-actin (blue arrows), and distinct leading edges in live mouse and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (red arrows). (C) Representative tracking of the TCR over time in live mouse CD4+ T-cells expressing F-actin (Lifeact-GFP) with early-to-late time-points scaled in cold-to-warm colours. (D) Quantification of actin and TCR flow velocities for multiple experimental conditions. No quantitative differences were observed in the TCR flow velocities (ns, P>0.9) across experimental conditions as well as comparing between primary mouse CD4+ and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (ns, P>0.9). In contrast, quantitative differences were observed in actin flow velocities (**P<0.001) under experimental conditions as well as when comparing primary mouse CD4+ and Jurkat CD4+ T-cells (**P<0.001). Further details are provided in the text. Scale bars: 1 μm (A,B), 5 μm (C).
Fig. 3.Distinct actin cytoskeleton protrusions in primary T-cells. (A) Mouse CD4+ T-cells form actin foci during activation (white arrows) in the periphery of the IS (red arrows). (B) Actin foci (white arrows and yellow in 3D reconstruction in images) form in the centre of the contact interface with a well-defined life-time distribution (bar graph). Scale bars: 5 µm (A), 1 µm (B).