| Literature DB >> 34014917 |
Leonard Campanello1,2, Maria K Traver3, Hari Shroff1,4, Brian C Schaefer3, Wolfgang Losert1,2.
Abstract
The adaptive immune system serves as a potent and highly specific defense mechanism against pathogen infection. One component of this system, the effector T cell, facilitates pathogen clearance upon detection of specific antigens by the T cell receptor (TCR). A critical process in effector T cell activation is transmission of signals from the TCR to a key transcriptional regulator, NF-κB. The transmission of this signal involves a highly dynamic process in which helical filaments of Bcl10, a key protein constituent of the TCR signaling cascade, undergo competing processes of polymeric assembly and macroautophagy-dependent degradation. Through computational analysis of three-dimensional, super-resolution optical micrographs, we quantitatively characterize TCR-stimulated Bcl10 filament assembly and length dynamics, and demonstrate that filaments become shorter over time. Additionally, we develop an image-based, bootstrap-like resampling method that demonstrates the preferred association between autophagosomes and both Bcl10-filament ends and punctate-Bcl10 structures, implying that autophagosome-driven macroautophagy is directly responsible for Bcl10 filament shortening. We probe Bcl10 polymerization-depolymerization dynamics with a stochastic Monte-Carlo simulation of nucleation-limited filament assembly and degradation, and we show that high probabilities of filament nucleation in response to TCR engagement could provide the observed robust, homogeneous, and tunable response dynamic. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the speed of filament disassembly preferentially at filament ends provides effective regulatory control. Taken together, these data suggest that Bcl10 filament growth and degradation act as an excitable system that provides a digital response mechanism and the reliable timing critical for T cell activation and regulatory processes.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34014917 PMCID: PMC8184007 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.779
Fig 4Simulations of Bcl10 filament growth reveal properties of real Bcl10 nucleation rates and concentrations, but fail to match observed values for ρ.
(A) Measurements of 20- and 40-min image data used to generate simulated cells with varying initial conditions. Simulated cells were initialized with a random number of Bcl10 nucleation sites that was sampled from a gamma distribution with parameters 1.59 and 15.92 (from the 20-min data); the randomly generated size of the immunological synapse relative to the size of the cell was sampled from a normal distribution with mean 0.40 and standard deviation 0.025; and the number of autophagosomes in the cell was sampled from a gamma distribution with parameters 4.3 and 7.9, which is result of combining the gamma distributions that best-fit the 20- and 40-min data. (B–left) The indicated amounts of purified histidine-tagged GFP or number of cells were processed for western blotting with an anti-GFP antibody. Approximate intensity of the highest intensity band is shown. Amount of GFP vs. band intensity was used to generate a standard curve, from which the amount of GFP in the given number of Bcl10-GFP-expressing cells was interpolated. (B–right) The indicated number of wild-type or Bcl10-GFP-expressing cells was processed for western blotting with an anti-Bcl10 antibody. Approximate intensity of the highest intensity band is shown. These values were used to determine the approximate fold-increase in Bcl10 expression in the exogenously expressing cell line. (C) Simulated Bcl10-filament growth is controlled by three parameters: the nucleation-site activation probability (pactivate), the initial layer attachment probability (pattach), and the steady state attachment probability (pgrow). (D) Average filament length and associated filament growth rates in a two-state nucleation-limited growth scenario. The undamped growth case (green, top) is when monomer access is not the rate-limiting step for filament growth, and the damped case (red, bottom) is when monomer access damps continued growth. (E) Changing simulation parameters exposes different behaviors in a heterogeneous population of T cells. Here, the nucleation-site-activation and initial-layer-attachment probabilities are simultaneously modulated in the same heterogenous population of 100 T cells with varying numbers of nucleation sites and initial Bcl10 concentrations. From left to right, the Bcl10 collision rate is increased. From top to bottom, the activation rate of nucleation sites is increased. All simulations are terminated when the concentration of Bcl10 monomers reaches zero.