| Literature DB >> 34503523 |
John C Charpentier1, Philip D King2.
Abstract
Once thought of primarily as a means to neutralize pathogens or to facilitate feeding, endocytosis is now known to regulate a wide range of eukaryotic cell processes. Among these are regulation of signal transduction, mitosis, lipid homeostasis, and directed migration, among others. Less well-appreciated are the roles various forms of endocytosis plays in regulating αβ and, especially, γδ T cell functions, such as T cell receptor signaling, antigen discovery by trogocytosis, and activated cell growth. Herein we examine the contribution of both clathrin-mediated and clathrin-independent mechanisms of endocytosis to T cell biology. Video Abstract.Entities:
Keywords: Cell growth; Endocytosis; Macropinocytosis; T lymphocytes; TCR signaling
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34503523 PMCID: PMC8427877 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-021-00766-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Modes of endocytosis and their salient features
| Actin-dependent | Scale (vesicle diameter) | Canonical cargoes | Cholesterol-dependent | Dynamin-dependent | Cell type first described in | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clathrin-dependent endocytosis | Depends on cell type [ | 35–200 nm [ | Tfr [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | |
| Caveolae-dependent endocytosis | Yes [ | 50–80 nm [ | Unclear | Yes [ | Yes [ | Murine gall bladder epithelium [ |
| CLIC/GEEC pathway endocytosis | Yes [ | Tubulovesicular, 40 nm width [ | CTxB, CD44 [ | Yes [ | No [ | COS, CHO cells [ |
| Flotillin-dependent endocytosis | Unclear [ | Unclear | Unclear | Yes [ | Unclear | HeLa cells [ |
| IL-2Rβ pathway endocytosis | Yes [ | 50–100 nm [ | IL-2Rβ [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | IARC 301.5, YT2C2, CIAC cells [ |
| Arf6-dependent endocytosis | Yes [ | 60–200 nm | MHC-I, CD59 [ | Yes [ | Unclear | CHO cells [ |
| Phagocytosis | Yes [ | 0.5–3 μm [ | Microbial pathogens | Yes [ | Yes [ | Ranine phagocytes [ |
| Fast endophilin-mediated endocytosis (FEME) | Yes [ | Tubulo-vesicular, 100 nm–μm length | β1AR [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | BSC1, HEK293 cells [ |
| Activity-dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) | Yes [ | 150 nm | VAMP4 [ | Yes [ | Yes [ | Murine cerebellar granule cells [ |
| Ultrafast endocytosis (UFE) | Yes [ | 60–80 nm [ | Unclear | Yes [ | Yes [ | Nematode neurons [ |
| Massive endocytosis (MEND) | No [ | < 100 nm [ | Phospholemman, polypalmitoylated proteins [ | Yes [ | No [ | BHK, HEK293 cells [ |
| Macropinocytosis | Yes [ | 200 nm–20 μm | Non-selective | Yes [ | Unclear | Murine sarcoma cells [ |
Note that actin-dependency, dynamin-dependency, and canonical cargoes remain to be clarified for multiple pathways
Forms of endocytosis described in T lymphocytes
| Described in T cells | Function in T cells | |
|---|---|---|
| Clathrin-dependent endocytosis | Yes | Plasma membrane receptor regulation [ |
| CLIC/GEEC pathway endocytosis | Yes | TCRζ endocytosis [ |
| Flotillin-dependent endocytosis | Yes | TCR αβ recycling [ |
| IL-2Rβ pathway endocytosis | Yes | IL-2Rβ complex endocytosis [ |
| Arf6-dependent endocytosis | Yes | Conjugate formation with APCs [ |
| Phagocytosis | Yes | Host defense/immune surveillance (γδ T cells) [ |
| Caveolae-dependent endocytosis | No | N/A |
| Macropinocytosis | Yes | mTORC1 activation and growth [ |
| Fast endophilin-mediated endocytosis (FEME) | Yes | IL-2Rβ complex endocytosis [ |
| Activity-dependent bulk endocytosis (ADBE) | No | N/A |
| Ultrafast endocytosis (UFE) | No | N/A |
| Massive endocytosis (MEND) | No | N/A |
Fig. 1Macropinocytosis in T cells. T cells use macropinocytosis to deliver extracellular amino acids (LQRS) to lysosomes necessary for the activation of mTORC1 that drives T cell growth (see text for details)