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Publication : Direction of leukocyte polarization and migration by the phosphoinositide-transfer protein TIPE2.

First Author  Fayngerts SA Year  2017
Journal  Nat Immunol Volume  18
Issue  12 Pages  1353-1360
PubMed ID  29058702 Mgi Jnum  J:258684
Mgi Id  MGI:6140507 Doi  10.1038/ni.3866
Citation  Fayngerts SA, et al. (2017) Direction of leukocyte polarization and migration by the phosphoinositide-transfer protein TIPE2. Nat Immunol 18(12):1353-1360
abstractText  The polarization of leukocytes toward chemoattractants is essential for the directed migration (chemotaxis) of leukocytes. How leukocytes acquire polarity after encountering chemical gradients is not well understood. We found here that leukocyte polarity was generated by TIPE2 (TNFAIP8L2), a transfer protein for phosphoinositide second messengers. TIPE2 functioned as a local enhancer of phosphoinositide-dependent signaling and cytoskeleton remodeling, which promoted leading-edge formation. Conversely, TIPE2 acted as an inhibitor of the GTPase Rac, which promoted trailing-edge polarization. Consequently, TIPE2-deficient leukocytes were defective in polarization and chemotaxis, and TIPE2-deficient mice were resistant to leukocyte-mediated neural inflammation. Thus, the leukocyte polarizer is a dual-role phosphoinositide-transfer protein and represents a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of inflammatory diseases.
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