4.8 Article

NKG2D discriminates diverse ligands through selectively mechano-regulated ligand conformational changes

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embj.2021107739

Keywords

conformational changes; ligand discrimination; mechanical regulation; NKG2D

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [31470900, 31522021, 31971237, 31600751, 32090044, 11672317, 11772348, 12002307]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China [2015CB910800, 2019YFA0707001]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB37020102]
  4. Major Scientific Project of Zhejiang Province [2017C03028]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LQ20H1600036]
  6. Foundation for Zhejiang Medical and Health Science and Technology Project [2018KY376]

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This study demonstrates that NKG2D has the ability to distinguish different ligands through mechanical force, with force strengthening the binding with MICA significantly.
Stimulatory immune receptor NKG2D binds diverse ligands to elicit differential anti-tumor and anti-virus immune responses. Two conflicting degeneracy recognition models based on static crystal structures and in-solution binding affinities have been considered for almost two decades. Whether and how NKG2D recognizes and discriminates diverse ligands still remain unclear. Using live-cell-based single-molecule biomechanical assay, we characterized the in situ binding kinetics of NKG2D interacting with different ligands in the absence or presence of mechanical force. We found that mechanical force application selectively prolonged NKG2D interaction lifetimes with the ligands MICA and MICB, but not with ULBPs, and that force-strengthened binding is much more pronounced for MICA than for other ligands. We also integrated steered molecular dynamics simulations and mutagenesis to reveal force-induced rotational conformational changes of MICA, involving formation of additional hydrogen bonds on its binding interface with NKG2D, impeding MICA dissociation under force. We further provided a kinetic triggering model to reveal that force-dependent affinity determines NKG2D ligand discrimination and its downstream NK cell activation. Together, our results demonstrate that NKG2D has a discrimination power to recognize different ligands, which depends on selective mechanical force-induced ligand conformational changes.

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