| Literature DB >> 21807869 |
Anne G Kasmar1, Ildiko van Rhijn, Tan-Yun Cheng, Marie Turner, Chetan Seshadri, Andre Schiefner, Ravi C Kalathur, John W Annand, Annemieke de Jong, John Shires, Luis Leon, Michael Brenner, Ian A Wilson, John D Altman, D Branch Moody.
Abstract
Microbial lipids activate T cells by binding directly to CD1 and T cell receptors (TCRs) or by indirect effects on antigen-presenting cells involving induction of lipid autoantigens, CD1 transcription, or cytokine release. To distinguish among direct and indirect mechanisms, we developed fluorescent human CD1b tetramers and measured T cell staining. CD1b tetramer staining of T cells requires glucose monomycolate (GMM) antigens, is specific for TCR structure, and is blocked by a recombinant clonotypic TCR comprised of TRAV17 and TRBV4-1, proving that CD1b-glycolipid complexes bind the TCR. GMM-loaded tetramers brightly stain a small subpopulation of blood-derived cells from humans infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, providing direct detection of a CD1b-reactive T cell repertoire. Polyclonal T cells from patients sorted with tetramers are activated by GMM antigens presented by CD1b. Whereas prior studies emphasized CD8(+) and CD4(-)CD8(-) CD1b-restricted clones, CD1b tetramer-based studies show that nearly all cells express the CD4 co-receptor. These findings prove a cognate mechanism whereby CD1b-glycolipid complexes bind to TCRs. CD1b tetramers detect a natural CD1b-restricted T cell repertoire ex vivo with unexpected features, opening a new investigative path to study the human CD1 system.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21807869 PMCID: PMC3171094 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20110665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307
Figure 1.CD1b tetramers stain human αβ T cells. (a) Bacterial GMM is formed by glucose linked at the 6-position to a mycolyl unit that contains two chiral centers, which are in the R configuration at positions 2 and 3 (2R, 3R). (b) Tetramerizable CD1b monomers were used in plate-bound antigen presentation experiments to measure IL-2 release by the CD1b-restricted human T cell line LDN5 in response to C32 GMM loaded overnight at 37°C (mean + SEM). (c) CD1b was loaded with GMMs that are naturally formed with R configuration at C2 and C3 (R, R) or synthetic GMM prepared with an S configuration at C2 or C3 (2R,3S+2S,3R) and complexed to streptavidin-labeled APC (tetramer APC) and tested for staining LDN5 T cells. (d) CD1b tetramers were then loaded with GMMs of the indicated average chain length (C32, C54, or C80) and tested for staining LDN5. MFI is mean fluorescence intensity. Data are representative of three or more experiments.
Figure 2.Tetramer staining proves a specific trimolecular interaction among CD1b, GMM, and the clonotypic TCR. (a) The LDN5 T cell clone was stained with unloaded CD1b tetramers or CD1b tetramers loaded with C32 GMM. Tetramers were preincubated with 10 µg/ml isotype control antibody or anti-CD1b antibody. (b) Soluble TCR-α chains with hexahistidine tags and -β chains with streptavidin tags were formed into soluble TCR dimers. (c) Loaded and unloaded tetramers were preincubated with fivefold molar excess of soluble recombinant T cell receptors derived from CD1a-restricted (sCD8-2) or CD1b-restricted (sLDN5) T cell lines. Data are representative of three or more experiments.
Figure 3.CD1b tetramers identify a mycobacterial glycolipid-reactive T cell repertoire in humans. (a) PBMCs of four subjects infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis were stained with CD1b tetramers in addition to CD3 FITC, CD14 PercP-Cy5.5, CD19 PerCP-Cy5.5, and violet viability dye and gated on live lymphocytes. (b) PBMCs from patient 1 were cultured overnight in 0.2 ng/ml IL-15 before FACS sorting. PBMCs from patient 2 were expanded by stimulation with anti-CD3 in the presence of irradiated feeder cells and IL-2 before FACS sorting using CD3 FITC and CD1b tetramers. Equal numbers of cells were incubated with 20,000 CD1b or empty vector–transfected K562 APCs with or without 5 µg/ml GMM (mean + SEM).
Figure 4.CD1b-restricted T cell populations express the αβ TCR and CD4. PBMCs from four subjects infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis were subjected to multicolor FACS analysis. Cells were stained with CD3, violet viability dye, CD14 and CD19-PercP-Cy5.5, loaded CD1b tetramers, and anti–TCR-αβ (a) and CD4 (b).