Protecting a serial killer: pathways for perforin trafficking and self-defence ensure sequential target cell death

JA Lopez, AJ Brennan, JC Whisstock, I Voskoboinik… - Trends in …, 2012 - cell.com
JA Lopez, AJ Brennan, JC Whisstock, I Voskoboinik, JA Trapani
Trends in immunology, 2012cell.com
Considerable progress has been made in understanding how cytotoxic lymphocytes use the
highly toxic pore-forming protein perforin to eliminate dangerous cells, while remaining
refractory to lysis. At least two mechanisms jointly preserve the killer cell: the C-terminal
residues of perforin dictate its rapid export from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), whose
milieu otherwise favours pore formation; perforin is then stored in secretory granules whose
acidity prevent its oligomerisation. Following exocytosis, perforin delivers the proapoptotic …
Considerable progress has been made in understanding how cytotoxic lymphocytes use the highly toxic pore-forming protein perforin to eliminate dangerous cells, while remaining refractory to lysis. At least two mechanisms jointly preserve the killer cell: the C-terminal residues of perforin dictate its rapid export from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), whose milieu otherwise favours pore formation; perforin is then stored in secretory granules whose acidity prevent its oligomerisation. Following exocytosis, perforin delivers the proapoptotic protease, granzyme B, into the target cell by disrupting its plasma membrane. Although the precise mechanism of perforin/granzyme synergy remains controversial, the recently defined crystal structure of the perforin monomer and cryo-electron microscopy (EM) of the entire pore suggest that passive transmembrane granzyme diffusion is the dominant proapoptotic mechanism.
cell.com