The endogenous chemokines CCL19 and CCL21 signal via their common receptor CCR7. CCL21 is the main lymph node homing chemokine, but a weak chemo-attractant compared to CCL19. Here we show that the 41-amino acid positively charged peptide, released through C-terminal cleavage of CCL21, C21TP, boosts the immune cell recruiting activity of CCL21 by up to 25-fold and the signaling activity via CCR7 by ~ 100-fold. Such boosting is unprecedented. Despite the presence of multiple basic glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding motifs, C21TP boosting of CCL21 signaling does not involve interference with GAG mediated cell-surface retention. Instead, boosting is directly dependent on O-glycosylations in the CCR7 N-terminus. As dictated by the two-step binding model, the initial chemokine binding involves interaction of the chemokine fold with the receptor N-terminus, followed by insertion of the chemokine N-terminus deep into the receptor binding pocket. Our data suggest that apart from a role in initial chemokine binding, the receptor N-terminus also partakes in a gating mechanism, which could give rise to a reduced ligand activity, presumably through affecting the ligand positioning. Based on experiments that support a direct interaction of C21TP with the glycosylated CCR7 N-terminus, we propose that electrostatic interactions between the positively charged peptide and sialylated O-glycans in CCR7 N-terminus may create a more accessible version of the receptor and thus guide chemokine docking to generate a more favorable chemokine-receptor interaction, giving rise to the peptide boosting effect.
The adult immune system consists of cells that emerged at various times during ontogeny. We aimed to define the relationship between developmental origin and composition of the adult B cell pool during unperturbed hematopoiesis. Lineage tracing stratified murine adult B cells based on the timing of output, revealing that a substantial portion originated within a restricted neonatal window. In addition to B-1a cells, early-life time-stamped B cells included clonally interrelated IgA plasma cells in the gut and bone marrow. These were actively maintained by B cell memory within gut chronic germinal centers and contained commensal microbiota reactivity. Neonatal rotavirus infection recruited recurrent IgA clones that were distinct from those arising by infection with the same antigen in adults. Finally, gut IgA plasma cells arose from the same hematopoietic progenitors as B-1a cells during ontogeny. Thus, a complex layer of neonatally imprinted B cells confer unique antibody responses later in life.
In this article, the affiliation for Prof. Holger Garn and Prof. Harald Renz was provided incorrectly. The correct affiliation for Prof. Holger Garn and Prof. Harald Renz is: Department of Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, Medical Faculty, Philipps University of Marburg, Germany.
Induction and regulation of specific intestinal immunoglobulin (Ig)A responses critically depend on dendritic cell (DC) subsets and the T cells they activate in the Peyer's patches (PP). We found that oral immunization with cholera toxin (CT) as an adjuvant resulted in migration-dependent changes in the composition and localization of PP DC subsets with increased numbers of cluster of differentiation (CD)103
We have recently described two independent mouse models in which the administration of diphtheria toxin (DT) leads to specific depletion of regulatory T cells (Tregs) due to expression of DT receptor-enhanced GFP under the control of the Foxp3 promoter. Both mouse models develop severe autoimmune disorders when Foxp3(+) Tregs are depleted. Those findings were challenged in a recent study published in this journal suggesting the expression of Foxp3 in epithelial cells as the cause for disease development. By using genetic, cellular, and immunohistochemical approaches, we do not find evidence for Foxp3-expression in nonhematopoietic cells. DT injection does not lead to a loss of epithelial integrity in our Foxp3-DTR models. Instead, Foxp3 expression is Treg-specific and ablation of Foxp3(+) Tregs leads to the induction of fatal autoimmune disorders. Autoimmunity can be reversed by the adoptive transfer of Tregs into depleted hosts, and the transfer of Foxp3-deficient bone marrow into T cell-deficient irradiated recipients leads to full-blown disease development.