Coexistence of multivalent and monovalent TCRs explains high sensitivity and wide range of response
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 8 August 2005
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 202 (4) , 493-503
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20042155
Abstract
A long-standing paradox in the study of T cell antigen recognition is that of the high specificity–low affinity T cell receptor (TCR)–major histocompatibility complex peptide (MHCp) interaction. The existence of multivalent TCRs could resolve this paradox because they can simultaneously improve the avidity observed for monovalent interactions and allow for cooperative effects. We have studied the stoichiometry of the TCR by Blue Native–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and found that the TCR exists as a mixture of monovalent (αβγεδεζζ) and multivalent complexes with two or more ligand-binding TCRα/β subunits. The coexistence of monovalent and multivalent complexes was confirmed by electron microscopy after label fracture of intact T cells, thus ruling out any possible artifact caused by detergent solubilization. We found that although only the multivalent complexes become phosphorylated at low antigen doses, both multivalent and monovalent TCRs are phosphorylated at higher doses. Thus, the multivalent TCRs could be responsible for sensing low concentrations of antigen, whereas the monovalent TCRs could be responsible for dose-response effects at high concentrations, conditions in which the multivalent TCRs are saturated. Thus, besides resolving TCR stoichiometry, these data can explain how T cells respond to a wide range of MHCp concentrations while maintaining high sensitivity.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Agonist/endogenous peptide–MHC heterodimers drive T cell activation and sensitivityNature, 2005
- Direct observation of ligand recognition by T cellsNature, 2002
- A T Cell Receptor CDR3β Loop Undergoes Conformational Changes of Unprecedented Magnitude Upon Binding to a Peptide/MHC Class I ComplexImmunity, 2002
- Costimulation and endogenous MHC ligands contribute to T cell recognitionNature Immunology, 2001
- The fracture‐flip technique reveals new structural features of the Escherichia coli cell wallJournal of Microscopy, 1998
- Imaging antigen recognition by naive CD4+ T cells: compulsory cytoskeletal alterations for the triggering of an intracellular calcium responseEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1998
- Evidence for multivalent structure of T-cell antigen receptor complexMolecular Immunology, 1995
- Dimerization of soluble major histocompatibility complex-peptide complexes is sufficient for activation of T cell hybridoma and induction of unresponsiveness.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1995
- Serial triggering of many T-cell receptors by a few peptide–MHC complexesNature, 1995
- Stoichiometry of the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) complex: each TCR/CD3 complex contains one TCR alpha, one TCR beta, and two CD3 epsilon chains.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1994