Jane C. Stinchcombe
University of Cambridge
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Featured researches published by Jane C. Stinchcombe.
Immunity | 2001
Jane C. Stinchcombe; Giovanna Bossi; Sarah Booth; Gillian M. Griffiths
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) rapidly destroy their targets. Here we show that although target cell death occurs within 5 min of CTL-target cell contact, an immunological synapse similar to that seen in CD4 cells rapidly forms in CTL, with a ring of adhesion proteins surrounding an inner signaling molecule domain. Lytic granule secretion occurs in a separate domain within the adhesion ring, maintaining signaling protein organization during exocytosis. Live and fixed cell studies show target cell plasma membrane markers are transferred to the CTL as the cells separate. Electron microscopy reveals continuities forming membrane bridges between the CTL and target cell membranes, suggesting a possible mechanism for this transfer.
Nature | 2006
Jane C. Stinchcombe; Endre Majorovits; Giovanna Bossi; Stephen D. Fuller; Gillian M. Griffiths
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) destroy virally infected and tumorigenic cells by releasing the contents of specialized secretory lysosomes—termed ‘lytic granules’—at the immunological synapse formed between the CTL and the target. On contact with the target cell, the microtubule organizing centre of the CTL polarizes towards the target and granules move along microtubules in a minus-end direction towards the polarized microtubule organizing centre. However, the final steps of secretion have remained unclear. Here we show that CTLs do not require actin or plus-end microtubule motors for secretion, but instead the centrosome moves to and contacts the plasma membrane at the central supramolecular activation cluster of the immunological synapse. Actin and IQGAP1 are cleared away from the synapse, and granules are delivered directly to the plasma membrane. These data show that CTLs use a previously unreported mechanism for delivering secretory granules to the immunological synapse, with granule secretion controlled by centrosome delivery to the plasma membrane.
Nature Immunology | 2003
Richard H Clark; Jane C. Stinchcombe; Anna Day; Emma J. Blott; Sarah Booth; Giovanna Bossi; Terry Hamblin; E. Graham Davies; Gillian M. Griffiths
Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS) is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by platelet defects and oculocutaneous albinism. Individuals with HPS type 2 (HPS2) lack the cytosolic adaptor protein 3 (AP-3) involved in lysosomal sorting, and are also immunodeficient. Here we characterize an HPS2 mutation and demonstrate that AP-3 deficiency leads to a loss of cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-mediated cytotoxicity. Although the lysosomal protein CD63 was mislocalized to the plasma membrane, perforin and granzymes were correctly localized to the lytic granules in AP-3-deficient CTLs. However, the lytic granules of AP-3-deficient CTLs were enlarged and were unable to move along microtubules and dock within the secretory domain of the immunological synapse. These data show that AP-3 is essential for polarized secretion from CTLs.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Gillian M. Griffiths; Andy Tsun; Jane C. Stinchcombe
There are many different cells in the immune system. To mount an effective immune response, they need to communicate with each other. One way in which this is done is by the formation of immunological synapses between cells. Recent developments show that the immune synapse serves as a focal point for exocytosis and endocytosis, directed by centrosomal docking at the plasma membrane. In this respect, formation of the immunological synapse bears striking similarities to cilia formation and cytokinesis. These intriguing observations suggest that the centrosome may play a conserved role in designating a specialized area of membrane for localized endocytosis and exocytosis.
Immunity | 2009
Misty R. Jenkins; Andy Tsun; Jane C. Stinchcombe; Gillian M. Griffiths
Summary Killing by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) is mediated by the secretion of lytic granules. The centrosome plays a key role in granule delivery, polarizing to the central supramolecular activation complex (cSMAC) within the immunological synapse upon T cell receptor (TCR) activation. Although stronger TCR signals lead to increased target cell death than do weaker signals, it is not known how the strength of TCR signal controls polarization of the centrosome and lytic granules. By using TCR transgenic OT-I CTLs, we showed that both high- and low-avidity interactions led to centrosome polarization to the cSMAC. However, only high-avidity interactions, which induced a higher threshold of intracellular signaling, gave rise to granule recruitment to the polarized centrosome at the synapse. By controlling centrosome and granule polarization independently, the centrosome is able to respond rapidly to weak signals so that CTLs are poised and ready for the trigger for granule delivery.
Immunity | 2015
Alex T. Ritter; Yukako Asano; Jane C. Stinchcombe; Nele M.G. Dieckmann; Bi-Chang Chen; C. Gawden-Bone; Schuyler van Engelenburg; Wesley R. Legant; Liang Gao; Michael W. Davidson; Eric Betzig; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Gillian M. Griffiths
Summary Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) use polarized secretion to rapidly destroy virally infected and tumor cells. To understand the temporal relationships between key events leading to secretion, we used high-resolution 4D imaging. CTLs approached targets with actin-rich projections at the leading edge, creating an initially actin-enriched contact with rearward-flowing actin. Within 1 min, cortical actin reduced across the synapse, T cell receptors (TCRs) clustered centrally to form the central supramolecular activation cluster (cSMAC), and centrosome polarization began. Granules clustered around the moving centrosome within 2.5 min and reached the synapse after 6 min. TCR-bearing intracellular vesicles were delivered to the cSMAC as the centrosome docked. We found that the centrosome and granules were delivered to an area of membrane with reduced cortical actin density and phospholipid PIP2. These data resolve the temporal order of events during synapse maturation in 4D and reveal a critical role for actin depletion in regulating secretion.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Andy Tsun; Ihjaaz Qureshi; Jane C. Stinchcombe; Misty R. Jenkins; Joanna Kleczkowska; Rose Zamoyska; Gillian M. Griffiths
The T cell receptor–activated tyrosine kinase Lck controls docking of the centrosome at the plasma membrane within the immunological synapse but not polarization of the centrosome around the nucleus.
Current Biology | 2015
Jane C. Stinchcombe; Lyra Onintsoa Randzavola; Karen L. Angus; Judith Mantell; Paul Verkade; Gillian M. Griffiths
Summary Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) are highly effective serial killers capable of destroying virally infected and cancerous targets by polarized release from secretory lysosomes. Upon target contact, the CTL centrosome rapidly moves to the immunological synapse, focusing microtubule-directed release at this point [1, 2, 3]. Striking similarities have been noted between centrosome polarization at the synapse and basal body docking during ciliogenesis [1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8], suggesting that CTL centrosomes might dock with the plasma membrane during killing, in a manner analogous to primary cilia formation [1, 4]. However, questions remain regarding the extent and function of centrosome polarization at the synapse, and recent reports have challenged its role [9, 10]. Here, we use high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) tomography analysis to show that, as in ciliogenesis, the distal appendages of the CTL mother centriole contact the plasma membrane directly during synapse formation. This is functionally important as small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting of the distal appendage protein, Cep83, required for membrane contact during ciliogenesis [11], impairs CTL secretion. Furthermore, the regulatory proteins CP110 and Cep97, which must dissociate from the mother centriole to allow cilia formation [12], remain associated with the mother centriole in CTLs, and neither axoneme nor transition zone ciliary structures form. Moreover, complete centrosome docking can occur in proliferating CTLs with multiple centriole pairs. Thus, in CTLs, centrosomes dock transiently with the membrane, within the cell cycle and without progression into ciliogenesis. We propose that this transient centrosome docking without cilia formation is important for CTLs to deliver rapid, repeated polarized secretion directed by the centrosome.
Immunology | 2001
Jane C. Stinchcombe; Gillian M. Griffiths
The secretory lysosomes found in haemopoietic cells provide a very efficient mechanism for delivering the effector proteins of many immune cells in response to antigen recognition. Although secretion shows some similarities to the secretion of specialized granules in other secretory cell types, some aspects of secretory lysosome release appear to be unique to melanocytes and cells of the haemopoietic lineage. Mast cells and platelets have provided excellent models for studying secretion, but recent advances in characterizing the immunological synapse allow a very fine dissection of the secretory process in T lymphocytes. These studies show that secretory lysosomes are secreted from the centre of the talin ring at the synapse. Proper secretion requires a series of Rab and cytoskeletal elements which play critical roles in the specialized secretion of lysosomes in haemopoietic cells.
Methods in Enzymology | 2000
Colin R. Hopkins; Ade`le Gibson; Jane C. Stinchcombe; Clare E. Futter
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the chimeric molecules employing horseradish peroxidase as reporter enzyme for protein localization in the electron microscope. Peroxidase is detectable in the electron microscope because in the presence of hydrogen peroxide it reacts enzymatically with diaminobenzidine (DAB) to form an insoluble, electron-opaque product. Its enzymatic activity provides an amplification step that makes horseradish peroxidase (HRP) an extremely sensitive tracer. An estimate using liposomes suggested that a single HRP molecule enveloped within a 50-nm-diameter vesicle is sufficient to fill the vesicle lumen with DAB reaction product. This reaction product is believed to be a complex, cross-linked mixture of tarlike substances, which during its formation cross-links other macromolecules located within its immediate vicinity. Endogenous peroxidase is present in peroxisomes and in other compartments, such the leukocyte granules, which contain myeloperoxidase. Inhibitors that can selectively block this activity in living cells are available, but they have not been widely used because localizations of endogenous peroxidases are readily demonstrable, and are not a complicating factor for most tracer studies.