Substrate stiffness governs the initiation of b cell activation by the concerted signaling of PKCβ and focal adhesion kinase

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Abstract

The mechanosensing ability of lymphocytes regulates their activation in response to antigen stimulation, but the underlying mechanism remains unexplored. Here, we report that B cell mechanosensing-governed activation requires BCR signaling molecules. PMA-induced activation of PKCβ can bypass the Btk and PLC-γ2 signaling molecules that are usually required for B cells to discriminate substrate stiffness. Instead, PKCβ-dependent activation of FAK is required, leading to FAK-mediated potentiation of B cell spreading and adhesion responses. FAK inactivation or deficiency impaired B cell discrimination of substrate stiffness. Conversely, adhesion molecules greatly enhanced this capability of B cells. Lastly, B cells derived from rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients exhibited an altered BCR response to substrate stiffness in comparison with healthy controls. These results provide a molecular explanation of how initiation of B cell activation discriminates substrate stiffness through a PKCβ-mediated FAK activation dependent manner.

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Shaheen, S., Wan, Z., Li, Z., Chau, A., Li, X., Zhang, S., … Liu, W. (2017). Substrate stiffness governs the initiation of b cell activation by the concerted signaling of PKCβ and focal adhesion kinase. ELife, 6. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.23060

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