| Literature DB >> 30711376 |
Peng Wu1, Tongtong Zhang1, Baoyu Liu2, Panyu Fei3, Lei Cui4, Rui Qin1, Huaying Zhu1, Danmei Yao1, Ryan J Martinez5, Wei Hu1, Chenyi An3, Yong Zhang6, Junwei Liu7, Jiawei Shi7, Juan Fan1, Weiwei Yin7, Jie Sun8, Chun Zhou9, Xun Zeng10, Chenqi Xu11, Jianan Wang12, Brian D Evavold5, Cheng Zhu13, Wei Chen14, Jizhong Lou15.
Abstract
TCRs recognize cognate pMHCs to initiate T cell signaling and adaptive immunity. Mechanical force strengthens TCR-pMHC interactions to elicit agonist-specific catch bonds to trigger TCR signaling, but the underlying dynamic structural mechanism is unclear. We combined steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulation, single-molecule biophysical approaches, and functional assays to collectively demonstrate that mechanical force induces conformational changes in pMHCs to enhance pre-existing contacts and activates new interactions at the TCR-pMHC binding interface to resist bond dissociation under force, resulting in TCR-pMHC catch bonds and T cell activation. Intriguingly, cancer-associated somatic mutations in HLA-A2 that may restrict these conformational changes suppressed TCR-pMHC catch bonds. Structural analysis also indicated that HLA polymorphism might alter the equilibrium of these conformational changes. Our findings not only reveal critical roles of force-induced conformational changes in pMHCs for activating TCR-pMHC catch bonds but also have implications for T cell-based immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: TCR; TCR triggering; antigen recognition; catch bonds; conformational change; immunotherapy; mechano-regulation; molecular dynamics simulations; pMHC; single molecule biophysics
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30711376 PMCID: PMC6408234 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2018.12.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970