Mapping the stochastic sequence of individual ligand-receptor binding events to cellular activation: T cells act on the rare events

Jenny J. Lin(University of California, Berkeley), Shalini T. Low-Nam(University of California, Berkeley), Katherine N. Alfieri(University of California, Berkeley), Darren B. McAffee(University of California, Berkeley), Nicole C. Fay(University of California, Berkeley), Jay T. Groves(University of California, Berkeley)
Science Signaling
January 15, 2019
Cited by 96

Abstract

T cell receptor (TCR) binding to agonist peptide major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) triggers signaling events that initiate T cell responses. This system is remarkably sensitive, requiring only a few binding events to successfully activate a cellular response. On average, activating pMHC ligands exhibit mean dwell times of at least a few seconds when bound to the TCR. However, a T cell accumulates pMHC-TCR interactions as a stochastic series of discrete, single-molecule binding events whose individual dwell times are broadly distributed. With activation occurring in response to only a handful of such binding events, individual cells are unlikely to experience the average binding time. Here, we mapped the ensemble of pMHC-TCR binding events in space and time while simultaneously monitoring cellular activation. Our findings revealed that T cell activation hinges on rare, long-dwell time binding events that are an order of magnitude longer than the average agonist pMHC-TCR dwell time. Furthermore, we observed that short pMHC-TCR binding events that were spatially correlated and temporally sequential led to cellular activation. These observations indicate that T cell antigen discrimination likely occurs by sensing the tail end of the pMHC-TCR binding dwell time distribution rather than its average properties.


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