| Literature DB >> 27114505 |
Peter Jönsson1, Jennifer H Southcombe2, Ana Mafalda Santos3, Jiandong Huo3, Ricardo A Fernandes3, James McColl4, Melissa Lever5, Edward J Evans3, Alexander Hudson3, Veronica T Chang3, Tomáš Hanke6, Andrew Godkin7, Paul D Dunne4, Mathew H Horrocks4, Matthieu Palayret4, Gavin R Screaton6, Jan Petersen8, Jamie Rossjohn9, Lars Fugger10, Omer Dushek5, Xiao-Ning Xu11, Simon J Davis12, David Klenerman13.
Abstract
The αβ T-cell coreceptor CD4 enhances immune responses more than 1 million-fold in some assays, and yet the affinity of CD4 for its ligand, peptide-major histocompatibility class II (pMHC II) on antigen-presenting cells, is so weak that it was previously unquantifiable. Here, we report that a soluble form of CD4 failed to bind detectably to pMHC II in surface plasmon resonance-based assays, establishing a new upper limit for the solution affinity at 2.5 mM. However, when presented multivalently on magnetic beads, soluble CD4 bound pMHC II-expressing B cells, confirming that it is active and allowing mapping of the native coreceptor binding site on pMHC II. Whereas binding was undetectable in solution, the affinity of the CD4/pMHC II interaction could be measured in 2D using CD4- and adhesion molecule-functionalized, supported lipid bilayers, yielding a 2D Kd of ∼5,000 molecules/μm(2) This value is two to three orders of magnitude higher than previously measured 2D Kd values for interacting leukocyte surface proteins. Calculations indicated, however, that CD4/pMHC II binding would increase rates of T-cell receptor (TCR) complex phosphorylation by threefold via the recruitment of Lck, with only a small, 2-20% increase in the effective affinity of the TCR for pMHC II. The affinity of CD4/pMHC II therefore seems to be set at a value that increases T-cell sensitivity by enhancing phosphorylation, without compromising ligand discrimination.Entities:
Keywords: T-cell activation; TCR phosphorylation; adhesion; binding equilibrium and kinetics; protein interactions
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27114505 PMCID: PMC4878507 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1513918113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205