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Domain in T Cell Activation Events1
Center for Immunology and Cancer Immunobiology Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75235
| Abstract |
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domains results in a
flatter surface in the region encompassing the c'' strand than the
corresponding region in Ig V domains. In the current study a possible
role for this region in T cell activation has been investigated by
inserting a potential glycosylation site at V
residue 82. This
residue is in proximity to the c'' strand and distal to the putative
interaction site for cognate peptide:MHC ligand. An additional
N-linked carbohydrate at this position would create a
protrusion on the V
domain surface, and this may interfere with TCR
aggregation and/or recruitment of signaling molecules. The modified TCR
has been expressed in transfected T cells, and the phenotype following
stimulation has been compared with that of cells expressing the
wild-type TCR. The mutation has significant effects on
activation-induced cell death and TCR internalization, but,
unexpectedly, does not affect IL-2 secretion. Furthermore, analyses
with tetrameric, peptide:MHC class II complexes suggest that the
mutation decreases the ability of the TCR to aggregate into a
configuration compatible with avid binding by these multivalent
ligands. | Introduction |
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ß T cells, the Ag receptor comprises a clonotypic
ß
heterodimer noncovalently associated with invariant CD3-
, -
, and
-
subunits and a disulfide-linked
-
homodimer. The
ß
heterodimer forms the recognition unit for cognate antigenic peptides
bound to restricting MHC class I or class II molecules, whereas the CD3
proteins are required for signal transduction (1, 2). T
cell signaling via the TCR-CD3 complex involves a cascade of events
that is initiated by phosphorylation of immunoreceptor tyrosine-based
activation motifs on the
- and
-chains by protein tyrosine
kinases such as the Src family kinase p56lck
(reviewed in Ref. 3). The affinity of a TCR for a given peptide:MHC complex plays a role in the outcome of the corresponding TCR:peptide:MHC interaction, and much data support affinity/avidity models of activation (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9). In particular, the off-rate of the interaction appears to play a central role (5, 9, 10), and this is consistent with kinetic proofreading models of T cell activation (11, 12). In addition to the effect of affinity/avidity in determining the outcome of TCR:peptide:MHC contact, for optimal (i.e., agonist) signaling there appears to be a need for ordered oligomerization or aggregation of TCRs and associated components following ligand recognition (13, 14, 15, 16). Thus, conformational and affinity models are not mutually exclusive, and both are relevant to sequential engagement models (13, 15, 17) for which the interaction needs to be sufficiently long-lived to allow organization of TCR, coreceptors, and other relevant proteins into higher order assemblies that are signaling competent. Much data support the concept that clustering of TCRs at the T cell:APC interface occurs during T cell activation (18, 19, 20, 21, 22). The segregation of TCR/CD3 and associated kinases into low density, detergent-insoluble rafts (or lipid rafts) following stimulation has also been reported (23, 24, 25, 26, 27). Furthermore, agents that cross-link TCRs are generally more effective in inducing T cell activation than monomeric ligands (28, 29), and data supporting a model for TCR dimerization following ligand interaction have recently been presented (14). Studies using monomeric, dimeric, and multimeric peptide-MHC class II complexes to activate T cells provide additional support for the need for TCR oligomerization (30, 31). Consistent with the concept that the TCR migrates into aggregates following ligand binding, quasi-elastic light-scattering studies with soluble molecules (TCR and peptide:MHC class II) indicate that the TCR forms hexameric complexes with cognate peptide:MHC (32). Thus, TCR aggregation may be an important step in T cell activation, but to date tools to investigate this in cell systems have not been available.
The x-ray crystallographic analysis of a murine V
domain
(V
4.2-J
40) derived from the 1934.4 T cell hybridoma
(33) demonstrated a novel strand topology that allows the
V
domain to pack in the crystal form as dimers of dimers
(34). This observation led to the proposal of a model for
TCR dimerization following ligand binding (35, 36),
although more recent x-ray crystallographic structures have argued
against the validity of this "dimer of dimers" model
(37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42). However, the novel strand topology results in a
flatter surface than that observed in variable domains that have an Ig
V domain-like topology (34). The strand switch also
results in a reorientation of the V
CDR2 by about 90° to produce a
more compact Ag interaction site (reviewed in Ref. 43).
This unusual strand topology is invariably observed for V
s in other
more recently solved TCR
ß structures (37, 42 ;
reviewed in Ref. 43). In Vß domains the position of the
c'' strand shows greater variation (44), but in one Vß
domain analyzed to date a switch similar to that present in the V
domain was observed (40). Furthermore, analysis of V
domain sequences indicate that there is an exclusion of potential
glycosylation sites in the vicinity of the V
c'' strand
(34), in contrast to the corresponding region of Vß
domains.
The distinctive structural features of V
domains prompted us to
analyze a possible role for the region encompassing the V
c'' strand
in events subsequent to ligand recognition by the TCR. To do this, we
have mutated a serine to asparagine to insert a potential glycosylation
site on this surface of the V
domain. Our rationale was that
N-linked glycosylation at this asparagine would insert a
protrusion in this region of the TCR that might affect receptor
aggregation and/or association with other signaling molecules. Mutated
-chains have been expressed in association with the wild-type
(WT)8 ß-chain in a
TCR
-ß- thymoma cell
line, and the characteristics of the resulting T cell transfectants
have been compared with those of similarly generated WT TCR
transfectants. The results indicate that the additional
N-linked carbohydrate differentially affects IL-2 secretion,
apoptosis, and TCR internalization. In addition, analysis of
transfectants with fluorescent tetrameric, cognate peptide:MHC class II
complexes indicates that there are differences in the ability of the
mutant and WT TCR to form a configuration that allows tetrameric ligand
binding.
| Materials and Methods |
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The I-Au-expressing B cell line, PL-8
(45) was provided by Dr. David Wraith (University of
Bristol, Bristol, U.K.). The I-Au-transfected
derivative of BW4157, Utm6.15 (46, 47), was made available
by Dr. Harden McConnell (Stanford University, Stanford, CA). The
TCR-negative cell line
58
-ß-
(48), which is also CD4 negative, was provided by Dr.
Stephen Hedrick (San Diego, CA) with permission from Dr. Bernard
Malissen (Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
Marseille-Luminy, France). The 1934.4
- and ß-chain expression
vectors used in the transfections were constructed with
and ß
shuttle vectors (49) provided by Dr. Mark Davis (Stanford,
CA). The anti-Vß mAb F23.1 (50) was a gift from Drs.
John Kappler and Philippa Marrack (University of Colorado Health
Science Center, Boulder, CO). The anti-TCR
-chain mAb H28-710
was provided by Dr. Kelly Kearse (East Carolina University, Greenville,
NC). FITC-labeled H57-597 (anti-mouse TCRß), 145-2C11
(anti-mouse CD3
), and annexin V-FITC were purchased from
PharMingen (San Diego, CA). FITC-labeled anti-mouse, anti-rat,
and anti-hamster IgG were obtained from Cappel (Warrington, PA).
The N-terminal peptide (Ac111; acetylated at position 1) of rat
myelin basic protein (MBP) and an analogue in which WT lysine at
position 4 is substituted by tyrosine (Ac111[4Y]) were synthesized
at the peptide synthesis unit of Howard Hughes Medical Institute,
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (Dallas, TX).
Streptavidin-PE was purchased from BioSource International (Camarillo,
CA). The anti-phosphotyrosine Ab, 4G10, was purchased from Upstate
Biotechnology (Lake Placid, NY). N-Glycosidase F was
purchased from Roche (Indianapolis, IN). Enhanced chemiluminescence
reagent (ECL) was purchased from Amersham (Poole, U.K.).
Plasmid construction
The 1934.4 V
and Vß sequences are derived from the 1934.4
TCR and have been described previously (51). The isolated
genes (52) were used as templates in the PCR with primers
designed to tailor the genes with splice sites and 5' XhoI
(
-chain), 5' ClaI (ß-chain), and 3' NotI
(
- and ß-chain) sites, using an approach analogous to that
described previously (49). The tailored genes were then
cloned into a modified pUC119 vector with unique XhoI,
ClaI, and NotI sites as
XhoI-NotI (
-chain) and
ClaI-NotI fragments (ß-chain) and sequenced. In
addition, Ser82 of the V
domain gene was
converted to Asn to generate the potential glycosylation site Asn-X-Ser
using the mutagenic oligonucleotide S82N
(5'-CAGCCGAGTCATTCTCTTCGACT-3') and site-directed mutagenesis as
previously described (53). All constructs were sequenced
and recloned into the
and ß shuttle vectors and resequenced
before use in transfections.
Transfections
58
-ß- cells
were used as recipients. Plasmid DNA was linearized using
SalI and transfected into the cells by electroporation, and
mycophenolic acid-resistant clones were selected as previously
described (49). Transfectants were analyzed for surface
expression of TCR by indirect immunofluorescence using F23.1
(anti-Vß8) followed by FITC-labeled anti-mouse IgG. Analysis
of staining was conducted using a flow cytometer (FACScan, Becton
Dickinson, Mountain View, CA) and the program WinMDI 2.7.
Analysis of the glycosylation state of the TCRs
T cell transfectants were washed with PBS and lysed at 4°C
with 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 25 mM KCl, 5 mM
MgCl2, 1 mM EDTA, and 1 mM PMSF containing 1%
Nonidet P-40 (1 ml/3 x 107 cells). The
lysate was spun at 15,000 x g, and the TCRs from the
supernatants were immunoprecipitated overnight at 4°C using the
anti-Vß mAb F23.1 cross-linked to Sepharose-4B, or protein
A-Sepharose (Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ). The beads were
thoroughly washed with the lysis buffer followed by PBS, resuspended in
PBS, and incubated with N-glycosidase F for 1 h at
37°C. Control beads were incubated with PBS alone. The beads were
boiled in Laemmli sample buffer containing 2% 2-ME, and the
supernatants were electrophoresed using 10% SDS-PAGE and transferred
to nitrocellulose (Schleicher & Schuell, Keene, NH) or Immobilon-P
(Millipore, Bedford, MA) membranes. The membranes were blocked with 1%
nonfat dry milk in PBS and incubated with an anti-C
hamster mAb,
H28-710, for 1 h at room temperature. The strip was washed with
PBS containing 0.05% Tween-20, incubated with HRP-labeled
anti-hamster IgG for 1 h, and then developed using the ECL
reagent.
T cell activation
T cells were washed with mycophenolic acid-free medium,
resuspended in RPMI 1640 containing 10% FCS, and incubated with
varying concentrations of the peptide Ac111[4Y] in the presence of
an I-Au-transfected thymoma line, Utm6.15, or B
cell line, PL-8, at 37°C in a humidified CO2
incubator. Control wells contained Utm6.15 and T cells but no peptide.
The transfectants were also activated using PMA and calcium ionophore
A23187 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) or with plate-bound mAbs F23.1
(anti-Vß8), 145-2C11 (anti-CD3
), and recombinant
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes (54).
The production and characterization of the recombinant
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes have been described
previously (54). Abs and the recombinant molecules were
coated onto 96-well plates for 2 h at 37°C (54).
Twenty to 24 h later the supernatants were collected, and IL-2
levels were determined using an IL-2-dependent cell line, CTLL-2, as
previously described (55) or by cytokine ELISA using
JES6-1A12 (rat anti-mouse IL-2, PharMingen) as a capture Ab and
biotinylated JES6-5H4 (rat anti-mouse IL-2, PharMingen) followed by
Extravidin-HRP (Sigma) for detection.
Analysis of apoptosis
Following activation with the appropriate stimuli (as above), cells were washed once with 1% BSA/PBS. Propidium iodide (PI) was added to a final concentration of 10 µg/ml, and cells were analyzed by flow cytometry (56). To confirm that the death was apoptotic, in some experiments cells were stimulated for 6 h at 37°C with 1 µg/ml of recombinant MBP111[4Y]:I-Au, stained with both annexin V-FITC (2.5 µg/ml) and PI (10 µg/ml), and analyzed by flow cytometry. For annexin V staining the buffer comprised 10 mM HEPES/NaOH (pH 7.4), 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 5 mM KCl, and 1.8 mM CaCl2.
TCR down-regulation
For TCR down-regulation experiments the T cell transfectants were stimulated for 13 h at 37°C with recombinant MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes or PMA and calcium ionophore A23187. After activation, TCR levels were determined by flow cytometric staining using an FITC-labeled anti-Cß Ab (H57-597) or an anti-Vß mAb, F23.1 followed by FITC-labeled anti-mouse IgG.
Anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblotting
T cells (2 x 107) were stimulated at 37°C using 100 µg/ml of Ac111[4Y] and 107 Utm16.5 cells. After 5 min cells were resuspended in 1 ml of lysis buffer (250 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-Cl, 0.5% Triton X-100, 1 µg/ml pepstatin, 1 mM Pefabloc, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, 2 µg/ml aprotinin, 1 mM activated sodium orthovanadate, and 5 mM NaF) for 2 h at 4°C. The TCR/CD3 complex was immunoprecipitated using F23.1 cross-linked to protein A-Sepharose beads. Following washes with lysis buffer and PBS, the beads were boiled for 5 min in SDS-PAGE loading buffer. 2-ME was added to the supernatants at a final concentration of 2%; the samples were electrophoresed using 10% SDS-PAGE and transferred to an Immobilon-P membrane. The membrane was dried for 12 h at room temperature and then incubated with the anti-phosphotyrosine Ab, 4G10, followed by HRP-conjugated anti-mouse IgG. The blot was developed using the ECL reagent.
Flow cytometric analyses using MBP111[4Y]:I-Au tetramers
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au tetramers were
prepared as described
elsewhere.9 T cells
were incubated with the MHC class II tetramers labeled with PE or, as a
control, with streptavidin-PE, in the presence of the anti-CD3
Ab, 145-2C11. After 3 h, the cells were washed twice with PBS and
analyzed by flow cytometry.
Analysis of TCR capping
Cells (23 x 106) were incubated with 10 µg/ml 145-2C11 in 100 µl of 1% BSA/PBS at 37°C for 40 min. Cells were washed once in warm (37°C) PBS and incubated with 10 µg/ml Texas Red-conjugated anti-hamster Ab (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) in 200 µl of 1% BSA/PBS at 37°C for 20 min. Cells were then washed three times with ice-cold PBS, fixed with 1% paraformaldehyde, and adhered to polylysine-treated coverslips. Coverslips were mounted using Polymount (Polysciences, Warrington, PA), and cells were visualized using a Zeiss Axiovert fluorescence microscope (New York, NY) and a Plan-Apochromat objective (x63). Images were captured with a Hamamatsu CCD camera (Hamamatsu Photonics K.K., Hamamatsu-City, Japan).
| Results |
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Mycophenolic acid-resistant TCR-positive transfectants were
generated by cotransfection of either the 1934.4 WT or
S82N mutant
-chain construct together with the ß-chain shuttle plasmid into
58
-ß-/CD4-
cells. The location of the mutation site on the V
4.2 structure
(34) is shown in Fig. 1
. The
transfectants expressed different levels of TCR as determined by
reactivity with the anti-Vß8 mAb, F23.1 (Fig. 2
A). Mutation of serine 82 to
asparagine in the TCR
-chain does not have a significant effect on
the surface expression of the TCR in transfectants (Fig. 2
A,
MUT-1 and MUT-2). However, despite analyzing about 2030 mutant
transfectants, expression levels as high as those seen for WT
transfectants such as WT-1 were not observed. This suggests that the
mutation may have a minor effect on the stability of the
-chain
and/or the efficiency of assembly of the corresponding TCR.
Immunoprecipitation of the expressed TCRs using F23.1 indicated that
the
-chain containing the
S82N mutation had a higher m.w. than
the WT
-chain (size difference of
23 kDa using SDS-PAGE), and
this size difference was eliminated following digestion with
N-glycosidase F (Fig. 2
B). The additional
glycosylation site is therefore used in the
S82N mutant.
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The 1934.4 TCR recognizes the N-terminal 11 residues (or nonamer) of MBP in association with the MHC class II molecule, I-Au. For recognition, the antigenic peptide requires acetylation at residue 1 to block the N-terminal charge (57), and position 4 analogues of this peptide that bind with higher affinity to I-Au than the WT peptide stimulate T cells more efficiently (46, 58). For example, replacement of position 4 lysine with tyrosine results in a peptide that gives >100-fold shifts in dose-response curves (58), and this is also observed for the transfectants (59). For this reason, the higher affinity analogue (Ac111[4Y]) has been used in the current study.
Initially, transfectants were stimulated with plate-bound
anti-Vß8 mAb, F23.1, and anti-CD3
Ab, 145-2C11. The
responsiveness of the transfectants, assessed by quantitating IL-2
levels, was dependent on the levels of surface TCR (data not shown).
This dependence on expression levels is consistent with the findings of
other studies using TCR transfectants (49, 59). For this
reason two transfectants (WT-3 and MUT-2), which showed only minor
differences (
2-fold; Fig. 2
A) in surface TCR levels, were
used for all subsequent studies. Similar levels of responsiveness were
seen when the T cells were stimulated by cross-linking the TCR with
F23.1 or the anti-CD3-
Ab 145-2C11 (Fig. 3
, A and B). Thus,
the
S82N mutation does not have a significant effect on IL-2
production in response to Ab-mediated cross-linking.
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Apoptosis induction in the TCR transfectants
To evaluate activation-induced cell death (AICD), recombinant
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes adsorbed onto the
wells of microtiter plates were used to stimulate the cells (Fig. 4
). The
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes were functionally
expressed by insertion of the N-terminal epitope of MBP between codons
2 and 3 of the gene encoding the mature ßu
polypeptide to result in antigenic peptide covalently tethered to the
I-Au molecule (54). These molecules
are potent and specific stimulators of T cell transfectants/hybridomas
expressing the WT 1934.4 TCR (54). They are also efficient
inducers of AICD, and these were used in apoptosis studies in
preference to Ag-pulsed APCs because this simplified the flow
cytometric analyses.
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S82N transfectants (data not shown), indicating that the
resistance to AICD was not a peculiarity of MUT-2 cells. TCR down-regulation
To analyze another important marker of T cell activation, TCR
down-regulation, the surface levels of TCR on the transfectants
following stimulation were analyzed by flow cytometry using the
anti-Vß8 Ab F23.1 or the anti-Cß Ab H57-597. Following
activation by the recombinant MBP111[4Y]:I-Au
complexes, mutant transfectants showed markedly reduced internalization
of TCR compared with WT transfectants (Fig. 5
A). The relatively low levels
of down-regulation observed with the WT transfectants are consistent
with the observations of others in studies in which immortalized T
cells were compared with T cell clones (60).
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-chain (Fig. 5Anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblotting
The observed differences between the WT and mutant transfectants
prompted us to investigate the phosphorylation of TCR-associated
proteins following Ag-specific stimulation, i.e., events proximal to
TCR-mediated activation. The transfectants were activated for 5 min at
37°C with Ac111[4Y]-pulsed APCs, and the TCR/CD3 complexes were
immunoprecipitated using F23.1 cross-linked to protein A-Sepharose
beads. Immunoblotting of the F23.1-captured immunoprecipitates with the
anti-phosphotyrosine Ab 4G10 demonstrated that the same
TCR-associated phosphoproteins were present in the WT-3 and MUT-2 cells
following stimulation with Ac111[4Y]-pulsed
I-Au-expressing cells (Fig. 6
). Consistent with
the F23.1 staining data (Fig. 2
), the amount of immunoprecipitated
phosphoproteins was lower for mutant cells than for WT cells.
Importantly, for both transfectants the ratio of pp23 to pp21 forms of
TCR-
was similar (Fig. 6
). Taken
together, the data indicate that the
S82N mutation and the resultant
additional N-linked carbohydrate do not qualitatively affect
the TCR-proximal phosphorylation events following antigenic
stimulation.
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To further investigate the characteristics of the mutated
TCR, flow cytometric analyses were conducted with fluorescently labeled
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au tetramers. These tetramers
specifically stain MBP111[4Y]:I-Au-responsive
T cells and activate cognate T cells to secrete IL-2 when used in T
cell stimulation assays.9 Levels of staining were increased
when the cells were coincubated with the anti-CD3
Ab, 145-2C11
(see Footnote 9). This enhanced staining is most likely due to the
ability of this Ab to cross-link TCRs and is consistent with the
observations for tetramer staining of T cell hybridomas
(61). This Ab was therefore used in all flow cytometry
experiments with tetramers. The tetramers stained MUT-2 poorly relative
to WT-3 cells, whereas staining of the transfectants with the
anti-Cß Ab H57-597 showed only minor differences that are
consistent with the F23.1 staining data (Fig. 2
). There are two
possible explanations for the poor tetramer staining of MUT-2 cells.
First, from studies in other peptide:MHC class II systems (62, 63) tetramer staining has been shown to correlate with
TCR:ligand affinity, and the mutation may therefore result in a reduced
affinity of the TCR for cognate ligand. However, the similarity of
MUT-2 and WT-3 in dose responses to recombinant
MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes (Figs. 3
and 4
)
would make this seem improbable. Second, the mutation may prevent the
aggregation of the
S82N TCR into a configuration that allows
multivalent binding of the tetrameric complexes. The former possibility
was investigated further by analyzing transfectants bearing a mutated
derivative of the 1934.4 TCR in which mutation of glutamic acid 69 to
alanine (E69A) results in a significant reduction in Ag responsiveness
(59). Fig. 7
, A
and B, shows the mean fluorescence intensity for WT-3,
MUT-2, and E69A-2 cells stained with either anti-Cß (H57-597) or
tetramers. IL-2 levels produced by the transfectants in response to
plate-bound MBP111[4Y]:I-Au complexes were
also analyzed (Fig. 7
C) and for the WT-3 and MUT-2 cells are
reminiscent of the data shown in Fig. 4
. Similar results were obtained
using biotinylated MBP111[4Y]:I-Au
immobilized on streptavidin-coated plates (not shown). As expected
from our earlier analyses of the E69A transfectant (59),
WT-3 cells are both more responsive to cognate ligand and stain at
higher levels with tetramer than E69A cells. In fact, the fluorescence
shift for WT-3 cells is about 2-fold greater with tetramer analysis
than that for H57-597 staining, whereas for E69A cells these shifts are
essentially the same (Fig. 7
B). Most significantly, despite
higher levels of tetramer binding by E69A transfectants compared with
MUT-2 cells, IL-2 secretion by E69A cells in response to cognate ligand
was very low (Fig. 7
C). Thus, MUT-2 cells are significantly
more responsive to MBP111[4Y]:I-Au than E69A
transfectants, and yet they bind tetramers of this ligand relatively
poorly. Since in other systems Ag responsiveness has been shown to
almost invariably correlate with the affinity (and particularly the
off-rate) of the TCR for cognate ligand (4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 64),
this makes it improbable that the poor tetramer staining is due to
reduced affinity of the
S82N TCR. Thus, the alternative explanation,
that the TCRs with an additional N-linked carbohydrate in
the proximity of the c'' strand cannot aggregate into a configuration
compatible with multivalent tetramer binding, appears to be more
likely. Finally, capping of the TCR using the anti-CD3
Ab
145-2C11 indicated that at this level of resolution there were no
significant differences among WT-3, MUT-2, and E69A cells (Fig. 7
D). The MUT-2 TCR is therefore able to redistribute into
the focal aggregates that are observed following T cell activation
(19).
|
| Discussion |
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domain in
T cell recognition and signaling. Although earlier crystallographic
studies suggested a role for this region of the TCR in dimerization,
more recent structural data have questioned the validity of this model
(37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 44). However, the unusual nature of this surface,
which is distinct from the corresponding region in the majority of Vß
domains analyzed to date (34 ; reviewed in Ref.
43), prompted us to investigate a possible role in T cell
function. A potential glycosylation site was therefore introduced at
residue 82, which is in close proximity to the c'' strand and is distal
to the putative Ag binding site (Fig. 1
-chain, and biochemical data indicate the presence of additional
carbohydrate in the mutated TCR
-chain.
The activity of T cell transfectants carrying the mutated
-chain
together with a WT ß-chain was compared with the activity of those
expressing the WT TCR. The effects on IL-2 secretion, apoptosis,
and TCR down-regulation following stimulation were analyzed. The data
show that the
S82N mutation has a minor, if any, effect on IL-2
secretion by the T cells in response to either Ab-mediated
cross-linking or cognate ligand. Significantly, this demonstrates that
modification of the TCR
-chain did not affect the ability of the TCR
to recognize cognate peptide-MHC complexes. Thus, insertion of the
N-linked carbohydrate in this region of the TCR did not
affect the signaling cascade that resulted in IL-2 secretion. However,
the mutation significantly affected AICD and TCR down-regulation, and
this provides a functional separation between TCR internalization or
AICD and IL-2 production. Earlier studies involving analysis of T cells
expressing TCR ß-chains mutated in the transmembrane region
(65, 66) or CD3
,
/TCR
-chains with truncations in
their cytoplasmic tail (67, 68) resulted in T cells that,
although not affected in cytokine secretion, were defective in either
apoptosis or down-regulation, respectively. Therefore, the current
study is distinct in that it shows functional defects in both AICD and
internalization due to an alteration in a membrane-distal region, i.e.,
the V
domain, of the TCR. Furthermore, in contrast to the studies
involving the mutated TCR ß-chain (65),
-chain
phosphorylation following activation appears to be normal in MUT-2
cells.
TCR down-regulation following ligand recognition is believed to be a
consequence of serial engagement of multiple TCRs that results in
sustained T cell activation (69) and has been shown to
play a role in the regulation of T cell responses
(70, 71, 72). However, analyses of TCRs bearing an
-chain,
CD3
, or CD3
with cytoplasmic tail truncations indicate that
down-regulation is not essential for cytokine production (67, 68), and this is consistent with our observations. The molecular
mechanism(s) of internalization is not fully understood, and both
tyrosine and serine protein kinases have been implicated in the process
of down-regulation (73). Furthermore, because ligation of
a TCR with a peptide:MHC complex or with anti-TCR Abs also induces
activation of protein kinase C, it was assumed previously that TCR
internalization in response to PMA stimulation and TCR triggering might
follow similar mechanisms. However, more recent data suggest that this
might not be the case (67, 74, 75). For example,
phosphorylation of serine 126 in the CD3
cytoplasmic tail, which is
required for PMA-induced down-regulation, does not appear to be
necessary for ligand-induced TCR internalization (75).
Furthermore, TCRs internalized following PMA down-regulation are
recycled, whereas agonist-induced down-regulation results in lysosomal
degradation (74, 76). In the current study insertion of an
N-linked carbohydrate in the proximity of the c'' strand of
the
-chain affected both PMA-induced and peptide:MHC-mediated
down-regulation, suggesting that this structural modification affected
the recruitment or activation of a common machinery that is used in
response to the mechanistically distinct stimuli. For example, the
modification may affect the recruitment/activation of Rab5 GTPase
and/or of clathrin-coated vesicle adaptor proteins that are known to be
involved in TCR internalization (72, 75, 77, 78). In this
context, clathrin coassembles with membrane-associated adaptor proteins
into a polyhedral lattice to bring about receptor internalization
(79, 80). It is therefore possible that the additional
glycosylation might not allow the mutated TCR-CD3 complexes to
configure into aggregates that are permissive for lattice
formation.
A possible explanation for the observed phenotype of cells expressing
the
S82N mutant TCR is that the protrusion induced by glycosylation
affects the association and/or activity of two or more distinct
cellular components that are exclusively involved in two bifurcating
processes (AICD and down-regulation) that do not involve any common
intermediates. This is consistent with the effects of PMA and ionomycin
on the transfectants; although the difference in down-regulation is
still observed following treatment with these stimuli, apoptosis is
induced to similar extents in both WT-3 and MUT-2 cells. The marked
reduction in tetramer (MBP111[4Y]:I-Au)
staining by the mutant transfectants indicates that the additional
carbohydrate severely limits aggregation of the TCRs into a
configuration that allows multivalent binding by the tetramer. Whether
this configuration is the same as that required for association of the
proteins involved in AICD and/or down-regulation is not clear from the
current experiments. However, it is probable that the loss of tetramer
binding is a manifestation of the steric effects of the additional
N-linked carbohydrate, and these effects may also impact on
alternative configurations of the TCR and associated proteins necessary
for either down-regulation or programmed cell death. Consistent with a
role for the architecture of the TCR and associated proteins in
programmed cell death, a recent study has demonstrated that altered
peptide ligands that induce focal aggregation/capping of the TCR also
induce apoptosis (81). Significantly, capping analyses
indicate that the mutated TCR is able to aggregate following
Ab-mediated cross-linking, demonstrating that this modified TCR retains
the ability to undergo surface redistribution.
Recent studies indicate that there might be a redundancy in the
TCR-proximal signaling mechanisms operative during down-regulation of
the TCR and AICD. For example, constitutive
p56lck activation targets TCRs to lysosomal
compartments (82), and this kinase has been suggested to
play a critical role during cell death in T cells by up-regulating FasL
expression (83, 84). Evidence supports involvement of the
transcription factors NF-
B and NF-AT in regulating Fas ligand
expression (85, 86, 87), but the unaffected IL-2 secretion by
MUT-2 cells suggests that these factors are functionally intact.
However, it has recently been shown that cytokine secretion and AICD
are differentially sensitive to NF-
B deprivation (88).
Thus, it is possible that while a signaling competent configuration
with respect to IL-2 secretion is induced by cognate ligand in the
mutant transfectants, the configuration for
p56lck to optimally phosphorylate substrates to
levels necessary for apoptosis and TCR internalization does not form.
These substrates may be as yet unidentified and may be distinct for the
two processes. This (partial) defect in p56lck
activity could be due to either sequestration of the putative
substrates and/or inappropriate orientation of
p56lck. By analogy, proximity and spatial
orientation of the tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 have been shown to be key
parameters in T cell signaling (89).
In conclusion, the results indicate that following stimulation, a
specific configuration of the TCR complex is needed for AICD and
receptor internalization that is distinct from that needed for IL-2
production. The generation of this configuration appears to correlate
with tetrameric ligand binding and involves a region of the TCR V
domain that, due to a specific strand rearrangement, has a flatter
surface than the corresponding surface in Ig V domains and the majority
of TCR Vß domains analyzed to date. The resulting complex may form an
optimal module necessary for recruitment of/interaction with the
molecular machinery critical for TCR down-regulation and AICD. The
transfectants described in this study could provide a useful system to
dissect mechanisms of T cell apoptosis and TCR internalization, and
this may lead to an improved understanding of the requirements for a
particular higher order configuration of the TCR and associated
polypeptides in the two processes. Finally, the resistance of the
transfectants bearing the mutated TCR to programmed cell death suggests
that our studies are of relevance to diseases involving dysregulated T
cell homeostasis, such as neoplasia and autoimmunity.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
2 A.Q. and C.G.R contributed equally to this work. ![]()
3 Current address: National Institute of Immunology, Aruna Asaf Ali Marg, New Delhi 110067, India. ![]()
4 Current address: Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903. ![]()
5 Current address: Gwen Knapp Center for Lupus and Immunology Research, University of Chicago, 924 East 57th Street, 4th Floor, Chicago, IL 60637-5420. ![]()
6 Permanent address: Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, TX 75083. ![]()
7 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. E. Sally Ward, Center for Immunology and Cancer Immunobiology Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75235. ![]()
8 Abbreviations used in this paper: WT, wild type; MBP, myelin basic protein; ECL, enhanced chemiluminescence; PI, propidium iodide; AICD, activation-induced cell death. ![]()
9 C. G. Radu, S. M. Anderton, M. Firan, D. C. Wraith, and E. S. Ward. Quantitative analysis of T helper cells specific for an immunodominant epitope of myelin basic protein. Submitted for publication. ![]()
Received for publication December 13, 1999. Accepted for publication April 17, 2000.
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