Activation-induced thrombospondin-4 works with thrombospondin-1 to build cytotoxic supramolecular attack particles

Chiara Cassioli, Nagaja Capitani, Claire C. Staton, Claudia Schirra, Francesca Finetti, Anna Onnis, Nadia Alawar, Szu Min Tu, Ludovica Lopresti, Vanessa Tatangelo, Carmela Tangredi, Salvatore Valvo, Hsin Fang Chang, Annachiara Miccoli, Ewoud B. Compeer, Jemma Nicholls, Bruce R. Blazar, Giuseppe Marotta, Matthew J.A. Wood, Livio TrentinLaura Patrussi, Michael L. Dustin, Ute Becherer, Cosima T. Baldari

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cytotoxic attack particles released by CTLs and NK cells include diverse phospholipid membrane and glycoprotein encapsulated entities that contribute to target cell killing. Supramolecular attack particles (SMAPs) are one type of particle characterized by a cytotoxic core enriched in granzymes and perforin surrounded by a proteinaceous shell including thrombospondin (TSP)-1. TSP-4 was also detected in bulk analysis of SMAPs released by CTLs; however, it has not been investigated whether TSP-4 contributes to distinct SMAP types or the same SMAP type as TSP-1 and, if in the same type of SMAP, whether TSP-4 and TSP-1 cooperate or compete. Here, we observed that TSP-4 expression increased upon CD8+ T cell activation while, surprisingly, TSP-1 was down-regulated. Correlative Light and Electron Microscopy and Stimulated Emission Depletion microscopy localized TSP-4 and TSP-1 in SMAP-containing multicore granules. Superresolution dSTORM revealed that TSP-4 and TSP-1 are usually enriched in the same SMAPs while particles with single-positive shells are rare. Retention Using Selective Hooks assays showed that TSP-4 localizes to the lytic granules faster than TSP-1 and promotes its accumulation therein. TSP-4 contributed to direct CTL-mediated killing, as previously shown for TSP-1. TSP-4 and TSP-1 were both required for latent SMAP-mediated cell killing, in which released SMAPs kill targets after removal of the CTLs. Of note, we found that chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cell culture supernatants suppressed expression of TSP-4 in CTL and latent SMAP-mediated killing. These results identify TSP-4 as a functionally important component of SMAPs and suggest that SMAPs may be targeted for immune suppression by CLL.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)e2413866122
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume122
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 11 2025

Keywords

  • cytotoxicity
  • immunology
  • leukemia
  • microscopy
  • secretion

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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