Cutting Edge: Membrane Nanotubes Connect Immune Cells

  • Önfelt B
  • Nedvetzki S
  • Yanagi K
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present evidence that nanotubular highways, or membrane nanotubes, facilitate a novel mechanism for intercellular communication in the immune system. Nanotubes were seen to connect multiple cells together and were readily formed between a variety of cell types, including human peripheral blood NK cells, macrophages, and EBV-transformed B cells. Nanotubes could be created upon disassembly of the immunological synapse, as cells move apart. Thus, nanotubular networks could be assembled from transient immunological synapses. Nanotubes were seen to contain GFP-tagged cell surface class I MHC protein expressed in one of the connected cells. Moreover, GPI-conjugated to GFP originating from one cell was transferred onto the surface of another at the connection with a nanotube. Thus, nanotubes can traffic cell surface proteins between immune cells over many tens of microns. Determining whether there are physiological functions for nanotubes is an intriguing new goal for cellular immunology.

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Önfelt, B., Nedvetzki, S., Yanagi, K., & Davis, D. M. (2004). Cutting Edge: Membrane Nanotubes Connect Immune Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 173(3), 1511–1513. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.173.3.1511

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