Ras inhibitor CAPRI enables neutrophil-like cells to chemotax through a higher-concentration range of gradients

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Abstract

Neutrophils sense and migrate through an enormous range of chemoattractant gradients through adaptation. Here, we reveal that in human neutrophils, calcium-promoted Ras inactivator (CAPRI) locally controls the GPCR-stimulated Ras adaptation. Human neutrophils lacking CAPRI (caprikd) exhibit chemoattractant-induced, nonadaptive Ras activation; significantly increased phosphorylation of AKT, GSK-3α/3β, and cofilin; and excessive actin polymerization. caprikd cells display defective chemotaxis in response to high-concentration gradients but exhibit improved chemotaxis in low- or subsensitive-concentration gradients of various chemoattractants, as a result of their enhanced sensitivity. Taken together, our data reveal that CAPRI controls GPCR activation-mediated Ras adaptation and lowers the sensitivity of human neutrophils so that they are able to chemotax through a higher-concentration range of chemoattractant gradients.

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Xu, X., Wen, X., Moosa, A., Bhimani, S., & Jin, T. (2021). Ras inhibitor CAPRI enables neutrophil-like cells to chemotax through a higher-concentration range of gradients. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(43). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2002162118

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