| Literature DB >> 33990697 |
Tomohiro Takehara1,2, Ei Wakamatsu2, Hiroaki Machiyama2, Wataru Nishi3, Katsura Emoto4, Miyuki Azuma5, Kenzo Soejima1, Koichi Fukunaga1, Tadashi Yokosuka6.
Abstract
The coinhibitory receptor, PD-1, is of major importance for the suppression of T cell activation in various types of immune responses. A high-resolution imaging study showed that PD-1 forms a coinhibitory signalosome, "PD-1 microcluster", with the phosphatase, SHP2, to dephosphorylate the TCR/CD3 complex and its downstream signaling molecules. Such a consecutive reaction entirely depended on PD-1-PD-L1/2 binding. PD-L2 is expressed on professional antigen-presenting cells and also on some tumor cells, which possibly explains the discrepant efficacy of immune checkpoint therapy for PD-L1-negative tumors. Here, we performed precise imaging analysis of PD-L2 forming PD-1-PD-L2 clusters associating with SHP2. PD-L2 could compete with PD-L1 for binding to PD-1, occupying the same space at TCR microclusters. The PD-1 microcluster formation was inhibited by certain mAbs with functional consequences. Thus, PD-1 microcluster formation provides a visible index for the effectiveness of anti-PD-1- or anti-PD-L1/2-mediated T cell suppression. PD-L2 may exert immune suppressive responses cooperatively with PD-L1 on the microcluster scale.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33990697 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02111-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642