4.6 Article

Surface-anchored monomeric agonist pMHCs alone trigger TCR with high sensitivity

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 328-342

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060043

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01-AI35513, R01 AI035513, R21 AI078387-01A1, R21 AI078387] Funding Source: Medline

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At the interface between T cell and antigen-presenting cell ( APC), peptide antigen presented by MHC ( pMHC) binds to the T cell receptor ( TCR) and initiates signaling. The mechanism of TCR signal initiation, or triggering, remains unclear. An interesting aspect of this puzzle is that although soluble agonist pMHCs cannot trigger TCR even at high concentrations, the same ligands trigger TCR very efficiently on the surface of APCs. Here, using lipid bilayers or plastic-based artificial APCs with defined components, we identify the critical APC-associated factors that confer agonist pMHCs with such potency. We found that CD4(+) T cells are triggered by very low numbers of monomeric agonist pMHCs anchored on fluid lipid bilayers or fixed plastic surfaces, in the absence of any other APC surface molecules. Importantly, on bilayers, plastic surfaces, or real APCs, endogenous pMHCs did not enhance TCR triggering. TCR triggering, however, critically depended upon the adhesiveness of the surface and an intact T cell actin cytoskeleton. Based on these observations, we propose the receptor deformation model of TCR triggering to explain the remarkable sensitivity and specificity of TCR triggering.

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