Volume 256, Issue 1
Invited Review

Orchestrating cytoskeleton and intracellular vesicle traffic to build functional immunological synapses

Helena Soares

Institut Pasteur, Department of Immunology, Lymphocyte Cell Biology Unit, Paris, France

CNRS, URA‐1961, Paris, France

HS and RL contributed equally to this work.Search for more papers by this author
Rémi Lasserre

Institut Pasteur, Department of Immunology, Lymphocyte Cell Biology Unit, Paris, France

CNRS, URA‐1961, Paris, France

HS and RL contributed equally to this work.Search for more papers by this author
Andrés Alcover

Institut Pasteur, Department of Immunology, Lymphocyte Cell Biology Unit, Paris, France

CNRS, URA‐1961, Paris, France

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 10 October 2013
Citations: 40
Correspondence to:Andrés AlcoverLymphocyte Cell Biology UnitInstitut Pasteur28, rue Dr Roux75724 Paris Cedex 15, FranceTel.: +331 4061 3064Fax: +331 4568 8943e‐mail: andres.alcover@pasteur.fr

Summary

Immunological synapses are specialized cell–cell contacts formed between T lymphocytes and antigen‐presenting cells. They are induced upon antigen recognition and are crucial for T‐cell activation and effector functions. The generation and function of immunological synapses depend on an active T‐cell polarization process, which results from a finely orchestrated crosstalk between the antigen receptor signal transduction machinery, the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons, and controlled vesicle traffic. Although we understand how some of these particular events are regulated, we still lack knowledge on how these multiple cellular elements are harmonized to ensure appropriate T‐cell responses. We discuss here our view on how T‐cell receptor signal transduction initially commands cytoskeletal and vesicle traffic polarization, which in turn sets the immunological synapse molecular design that regulates T‐cell activation. We also discuss how the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV‐1) hijacks some of these processes impairing immunological synapse generation and function.

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