Literature DB >> 30850545

Biphasic mechanosensitivity of T cell receptor-mediated spreading of lymphocytes.

Astrid Wahl1, Céline Dinet1, Pierre Dillard1,2, Aya Nassereddine1,2, Pierre-Henri Puech2, Laurent Limozin3, Kheya Sengupta4.   

Abstract

Mechanosensing by T cells through the T cell receptor (TCR) is at the heart of immune recognition. While the mechanobiology of the TCR at the molecular level is increasingly well documented, its link to cell-scale response is poorly understood. Here we explore T cell spreading response as a function of substrate rigidity and show that remarkably, depending on the surface receptors stimulated, the cellular response may be either biphasic or monotonous. When adhering solely via the TCR complex, T cells respond to environmental stiffness in an unusual fashion, attaining maximal spreading on an optimal substrate stiffness comparable to that of professional antigen-presenting cells. However, in the presence of additional ligands for the integrin LFA-1, this biphasic response is abrogated and the cell spreading increases monotonously with stiffness up to a saturation value. This ligand-specific mechanosensing is effected through an actin-polymerization-dependent mechanism. We construct a mesoscale semianalytical model based on force-dependent bond rupture and show that cell-scale biphasic or monotonous behavior emerges from molecular parameters. As the substrate stiffness is increased, there is a competition between increasing effective stiffness of the bonds, which leads to increased cell spreading and increasing bond breakage, which leads to decreased spreading. We hypothesize that the link between actin and the receptors (TCR or LFA-1), rather than the ligand/receptor linkage, is the site of this mechanosensing.

Entities:  

Keywords:  T cell; TCR; cell adhesion; cell spreading; mechanosensing

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30850545      PMCID: PMC6442626          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1811516116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


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