Functional role of T-cell receptor nanoclusters in signal initiation and antigen discrimination

Sophie V. Pageon(Australian Research Council), Thibault Tabarin(Australian Research Council), Yui Yamamoto(Australian Research Council), Yuanqing Ma(Australian Research Council), Philip R. Nicovich(Australian Research Council), John S. Bridgeman(Cellular Therapeutics (United Kingdom)), André Cohnen(University of Oxford), Carola Benzing(Australian Research Council), Yijun Gao(Australian Research Council), Michael D. Crowther(Cardiff University), Katie Tungatt(Cardiff University), Garry Dolton(Cardiff University), Andrew K. Sewell(Cardiff University), David A. Price(National Institutes of Health), Oreste Acuto(University of Oxford), Robert G. Parton(Australian Research Council), J. Justin Gooding(Australian Research Council), Jérémie Rossy(Australian Research Council), Jamie Rossjohn(Australian Research Council), Katharina Gaus(Australian Research Council)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
August 29, 2016
Cited by 243Open Access
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Abstract

Antigen recognition by the T-cell receptor (TCR) is a hallmark of the adaptive immune system. When the TCR engages a peptide bound to the restricting major histocompatibility complex molecule (pMHC), it transmits a signal via the associated CD3 complex. How the extracellular antigen recognition event leads to intracellular phosphorylation remains unclear. Here, we used single-molecule localization microscopy to quantify the organization of TCR-CD3 complexes into nanoscale clusters and to distinguish between triggered and nontriggered TCR-CD3 complexes. We found that only TCR-CD3 complexes in dense clusters were phosphorylated and associated with downstream signaling proteins, demonstrating that the molecular density within clusters dictates signal initiation. Moreover, both pMHC dose and TCR-pMHC affinity determined the density of TCR-CD3 clusters, which scaled with overall phosphorylation levels. Thus, TCR-CD3 clustering translates antigen recognition by the TCR into signal initiation by the CD3 complex, and the formation of dense signaling-competent clusters is a process of antigen discrimination.


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