| Literature DB >> 33391284 |
Bernadett Bacsa1, Annarita Graziani1, Denis Krivic1, Patrick Wiedner1, Roland Malli2, Thomas Rauter2, Oleksandra Tiapko1, Klaus Groschner1.
Abstract
Canonical transient receptor potential (TRPC) channels are considered as elements of the immune cell Ca2+ handling machinery. We therefore hypothesized that TRPC photopharmacology may enable uniquely specific modulation of immune responses. Utilizing a recently established TRPC3/6/7 selective, photochromic benzimidazole agonist OptoBI-1, we set out to test this concept for mast cell NFAT signaling. RBL-2H3 mast cells were found to express TRPC3 and TRPC7 mRNA but lacked appreciable Ca2+/NFAT signaling in response to OptoBI-1 photocycling. Genetic modification of the cells by introduction of single recombinant TRPC isoforms revealed that exclusively TRPC6 expression generated OptoBI-1 sensitivity suitable for opto-chemical control of NFAT1 activity. Expression of any of three benzimidazole-sensitive TRPC isoforms (TRPC3/6/7) reconstituted plasma membrane TRPC conductances in RBL cells, and expression of TRPC6 or TRPC7 enabled light-mediated generation of temporally defined Ca2+ signaling patterns. Nonetheless, only cells overexpressing TRPC6 retained essentially low basal levels of NFAT activity and displayed rapid and efficient NFAT nuclear translocation upon OptoBI-1 photocycling. Hence, genetic modification of the mast cells' TRPC expression pattern by the introduction of TRPC6 enables highly specific opto-chemical control over Ca2+ transcription coupling in these immune cells.Entities:
Keywords: NFAT nuclear translocation; OptoBI-1; canonical transient receptor potential channels; mast cells; opto-chemical immunomodulation; photopharmacology
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33391284 PMCID: PMC7775509 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.613194
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786