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T cells: No time to die

Electron microscope image of T cells
Coronin 1 promotes long-term survival of the T cells of our immune system. (Electron microscope image of T cells: Nano Imaging Lab SNI/Biozentrum, Ðǿմ«Ã½)

They are at the forefront in the fight against viruses, bacteria, and malignant cells: the T cells of our immune system. But the older we get, the fewer of them our body produces. Thus, how long we remain healthy also depends on how long the T cells survive. Researchers at the Ðǿմ«Ã½ have now uncovered a previously unknown signaling pathway essential for T cell viability.

22 December 2021

Electron microscope image of T cells
Coronin 1 promotes long-term survival of the T cells of our immune system. (Electron microscope image of T cells: Nano Imaging Lab SNI/Biozentrum, Ðǿմ«Ã½)

Like human beings, every cell in our body tries to ward off death as long as it can. This is particular true for a specific type of immune cells, called T-lymphocytes, or T cells for short. These cells keep viruses, bacteria, parasites and cancerous cells at bay. While T cell production is an active process in infants, children and young adults, it comes to a gradual stop upon aging, meaning that in order to maintain adequate immunity up to an old age, your T cells should better live as long as you.

How T cells manage to survive for such a long time, up to several decades in humans, has long remained unclear. In collaboration with scientists at the Department of Biomedicine and , the Center for Scientific Computing of the Ðǿմ«Ã½, Professor Jean Pieters’ research group at the Biozentrum has now revealed the existence of a hitherto unrecognized pathway promoting long-term survival of T cells. In Science Signaling they report that this signaling pathway, regulated by the protein coronin 1, is responsible for suppressing T cell death.

Coronin 1 enables long-term survival

In earlier research, Pieters’ team and others had shown that coronin 1 is essential for the survival of peripheral T cells while being dispensable for their production and maturation. In their current study, the team has now been able to show that pathways previously thought to be implicated in T cell survival were in fact independent of coronin 1, and they furthermore uncovered a unknown coronin 1-driven signaling pathway that regulates T cell survival.


Original publication

Mayumi Mori, Julie Ruer-Laventie, Wandrille Duchemin, Philippe Demougin, Tohnyui Ndinyanka Fabrice, Matthias P. Wymann, Jean Pieters.

Science Signaling (2021), doi: 10.1126/scisignal.abj0057

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