The secretory synapse: the secrets of a serial killer

G Bossi, C Trambas, S Booth, R Clark… - Immunological …, 2002 - Wiley Online Library
G Bossi, C Trambas, S Booth, R Clark, J Stinchcombe, GM Griffiths
Immunological reviews, 2002Wiley Online Library
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) destroy their targets by a process involving secretion of
specialized granules. The interactions between CTLs and target can be very brief;
nevertheless, adhesion and signaling proteins segregate into an immunological synapse.
Secretion occurs in a specialized secretory domain. Use of live and fixed cell microscopy
allows this secretory synapse to be visualized both temporally and spatially. The combined
use of confocal and electron microscopy has produced some surprising findings, which …
Summary:  Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) destroy their targets by a process involving secretion of specialized granules. The interactions between CTLs and target can be very brief; nevertheless, adhesion and signaling proteins segregate into an immunological synapse. Secretion occurs in a specialized secretory domain. Use of live and fixed cell microscopy allows this secretory synapse to be visualized both temporally and spatially. The combined use of confocal and electron microscopy has produced some surprising findings, which suggest that the secretory synapse may be important both in delivering the lethal hit and in facilitating membrane transfer from target to CTL. Studies on the secretory synapse in wild‐type and mutant CTLs have been used to identify proteins involved in secretion. Further clues as to the signals required for secretion are emerging from comparisons of inhibitory and activating synapses formed by natural killer cells.
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