Mapping autophagosome contents identifies interleukin-7 receptor-alpha as a key cargo modulating CD4+ T cell proliferation.
CD4+ T cells are pivotal cells playing roles in the orchestration of humoral and cytotoxic immune responses. It is known that CD4+ T cell proliferation relies on autophagy, but identification of the autophagosomal cargo involved is missing. Here we create a transgenic mouse model, to enable direct mapping of the proteinaceous content of autophagosomes in primary cells by LC3 proximity labelling. Interleukin-7 receptor-alpha, a cytokine receptor mostly found in naive and memory T cells, is reproducibly detected in autophagosomes of activated CD4+ T cells. Consistently, CD4+ T cells lacking autophagy show increased interleukin-7 receptor-alpha surface expression, while no defect in internalisation is observed. Mechanistically, excessive surface interleukin-7 receptor-alpha sequestrates the common gamma chain, impairing the interleukin-2 receptor assembly and downstream signalling crucial for T cell proliferation. This study shows that key autophagy substrates can be reliably identified in this mouse model and help mechanistically unravel autophagy's contribution to healthy physiology and disease.
SEEK ID: http://lmmeisd-2.srv.mwn.de/publications/39
PubMed ID: 36055998
Projects: Published Datasets
Publication type: Journal
Journal: Nat Commun
Citation: Nat Commun. 2022 Sep 2;13(1):5174. doi: 10.1038/s41467-022-32718-x.
Date Published: 2nd Sep 2022
Registered Mode: by PubMed ID
Views: 111
Created: 8th Jul 2024 at 12:27
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