细胞生物学
细胞外小泡
功能(生物学)
细胞外
线粒体
胞外囊泡
小泡
生物
微泡
生物化学
小RNA
膜
基因
作者
Kenneth P. Hough,Jennifer Trevor,Balu K. Chacko,John G. Strenkowski,Yong Wang,Kayla F. Goliwas,Nathaniel B. Bone,Young-il Kim,Renita Holmes,Shia Vang,A Hassan D I Pritchard,Jay Chin,Sandeep Bodduluri,Veena B. Antony,Sultan Tousif,Mohammad Athar,Diptiman Chanda,Kasturi Mitra,Jaroslaw W. Zmijewski,Jianhua Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.04.30.589227
摘要
Rationale: Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways that involves crosstalk between myeloid-derived regulatory cells (MDRCs) and CD4+ T cells. Although small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) are known to mediate cell-cell communication, the role of sEV signaling via mitochondria in perpetuating asthmatic airway inflammation is unknown. Objectives: We investigated the effects of MDRC-derived exosomes on dysregulated T cell responses in asthmatics. Methods: Small extracellular vesicles isolated from bronchoalveolar lavage fluid or airway MDRCs of mild to moderate asthmatics or healthy controls were co-cultured with autologous peripheral and airway CD4+ T lymphocytes. sEV internalization, sEV-mediated transfer of mitochondria targeted GFP to T cells, sEV mitochondrial signaling, and subsequent activation, proliferation and polarization of CD4+ T lymphocytes to Th1, Th2 and Th17 subsets were assessed. Measurements and main results: Airway MDRC-derived sEVs from asthmatics mediated T cell receptor engagement and transfer of mitochondria that induced antigen-specific activation and polarization into Th17 and Th2 cells, drivers of chronic airway inflammation in asthma. CD4+ T cells internalized sEVs containing mitochondria predominantly by membrane fusion, and blocking mitochondrial oxidant signaling in MDRC-derived exosomes mitigated T cell activation. Reactive oxygen species-mediated signaling that elicited T cell activation in asthmatics was sEV-dependent. A Drp1-dependent mitochondrial fission in pro-inflammatory MDRCs promoted mitochondrial packaging within sEVs, which then co-localized with the polarized actin cytoskeleton and mitochondrial networks in the organized immune synapse of recipient T cells. Conclusions: Our studies indicate a previously unrecognized role for mitochondrial fission and exosomal mitochondrial transfer in dysregulated T cell activation and Th cell differentiation in asthma which could constitute a novel therapeutic target.
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