Kinesin-1 regulates antigen cross-presentation through the scission of tubulations from early endosomes in dendritic cells

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Abstract

Dendritic cells (DCs) constitute a specialized population of immune cells that present exogenous antigen (Ag) on major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules to initiate CD8 + T cell responses against pathogens and tumours. Although cross-presentation depends critically on the trafficking of Ag-containing intracellular vesicular compartments, the molecular machinery that regulates vesicular transport is incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that mice lacking Kif5b (the heavy chain of kinesin-1) in their DCs exhibit a major impairment in cross-presentation and thus a poor in vivo anti-tumour response. We find that kinesin-1 critically regulates antigen cross-presentation in DCs, by controlling Ag degradation, the endosomal pH, and MHC-I recycling. Mechanistically, kinesin-1 appears to regulate early endosome maturation by allowing the scission of endosomal tubulations. Our results highlight kinesin-1’s role as a molecular checkpoint that modulates the balance between antigen degradation and cross-presentation.

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Belabed, M., Mauvais, F. X., Maschalidi, S., Kurowska, M., Goudin, N., Huang, J. D., … Ménasché, G. (2020). Kinesin-1 regulates antigen cross-presentation through the scission of tubulations from early endosomes in dendritic cells. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15692-0

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