CD44 acts as a coreceptor for cell-specific enhancement of signaling and regulatory T cell induction by TGM1, a parasite TGF-β mimic

Author:

van Dinther Maarten1ORCID,Cunningham Kyle T.2ORCID,Singh Shashi Prakash2ORCID,White Madeleine P. J.2ORCID,Campion Tiffany2ORCID,Ciancia Claire2,van Veelen Peter A.3,de Ru Arnoud H.3,González-Prieto Román45ORCID,Mukundan Ananya6ORCID,Byeon Chang-Hyeock6,Staggers Sophia R.6ORCID,Hinck Cynthia S.6,Hinck Andrew P.6ORCID,Dijke Peter ten1ORCID,Maizels Rick M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Oncode Institute and Department of Cell and Chemical Biology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden 2300 RC, The Netherlands

2. Wellcome Centre for Integrative Parasitology, School of Infection and Immunity, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8TA, United Kingdom

3. Center for Proteomics and Metabolomics, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden 2333 ZC, The Netherlands

4. Andalusian Center for Molecular Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Universidad de Sevilla - CSIC - Universidad Pablo de Olavide, 41092 Sevilla, Spain

5. Department of Cell Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of Sevilla, 41013 Sevilla, Spain

6. Department of Structural Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15260

Abstract

Long-lived parasites evade host immunity through highly evolved molecular strategies. The murine intestinal helminth, Heligmosomoides polygyrus , down-modulates the host immune system through release of an immunosuppressive TGF-β mimic, TGM1, which is a divergent member of the CCP (Sushi) protein family. TGM1 comprises 5 domains, of which domains 1-3 (D1/2/3) bind mammalian TGF-β receptors, acting on T cells to induce Foxp3 + regulatory T cells; however, the roles of domains 4 and 5 (D4/5) remain unknown. We noted that truncated TGM1, lacking D4/5, showed reduced potency. Combination of D1/2/3 and D4/5 as separate proteins did not alter potency, suggesting that a physical linkage is required and that these domains do not deliver an independent signal. Coprecipitation from cells treated with biotinylated D4/5, followed by mass spectrometry, identified the cell surface protein CD44 as a coreceptor for TGM1. Both full-length and D4/5 bound strongly to a range of primary cells and cell lines, to a greater degree than D1/2/3 alone, although some cell lines did not respond to TGM1. Ectopic expression of CD44 in nonresponding cells conferred responsiveness, while genetic depletion of CD44 abolished enhancement by D4/5 and ablated the ability of full-length TGM1 to bind to cell surfaces. Moreover, CD44-deficient T cells showed attenuated induction of Foxp3 by full-length TGM1, to levels similar to those induced by D1/2/3. Hence, a parasite protein known to bind two host cytokine receptor subunits has evolved a third receptor specificity, which serves to raise the avidity and cell type–specific potency of TGF-β signaling in mammalian cells.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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