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IL-23 signaling regulation of pro-inflammatory T-cell migration uncovered by phosphoproteomics

Candelas Álvarez-Salamero, Raquel Castillo‐González, Gloria Pastor-Fernández, Isabel R. Mariblanca, Julio Manuel Lora Pino, Danay Cibrián, Marı́a N. Navarro

2020PLoS Biology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Interleukin 23 (IL-23) triggers pathogenic features in pro-inflammatory, IL-17-secreting T cells (Th17 and Tγδ17) that play a key role in the development of inflammatory diseases. However, the IL-23 signaling cascade remains largely undefined. Here, we used quantitative phosphoproteomics to characterize IL-23 signaling in primary murine Th17 cells. We quantified 6,888 phosphorylation sites in Th17 cells and found 168 phosphorylations regulated upon IL-23 stimulation. IL-23 increased the phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chain (RLC), an actomyosin contractibility marker, in Th17 and Tγδ17 cells. IL-23-induced RLC phosphorylation required Janus kinase 2 (JAK2) and Rho-associated protein kinase (ROCK) catalytic activity, and further study of the IL-23/ROCK connection revealed an unexpected role of IL-23 in the migration of Tγδ17 and Th17 cells through ROCK activation. In addition, pharmacological inhibition of ROCK reduced Tγδ17 recruitment to inflamed skin upon challenge with inflammatory agent Imiquimod. This work (i) provides new insights into phosphorylation networks that control Th17 cells, (ii) widely expands the current knowledge on IL-23 signaling, and (iii) contributes to the increasing list of immune cells subsets characterized by global phosphoproteomic approaches.

Topics & Concepts

PhosphoproteomicsBiologyPhosphorylationCell biologyMyosin light-chain kinaseSignal transductionKinaseInterleukin 17Immune systemProtein phosphorylationProtein kinase AImmunologyPsoriasis: Treatment and PathogenesisDermatology and Skin DiseasesT-cell and B-cell Immunology