The receptor deformation model of TCR triggering
Open Access
- 5 November 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The FASEB Journal
- Vol. 22 (4) , 1002-1008
- https://doi.org/10.1096/fj.07-9331hyp
Abstract
Through T cell receptors (TCRs), T cells can detect and respond to very small numbers of foreign peptides among a huge number of self‐peptides presented by major histocompatibility complexes (pMHCs) on the surface of antigen‐presenting cells (APCs). How T cells achieve such remarkable sensitivity and specificity through pMHC‐TCR binding is an intensively pursued issue in immunology today;the key question is how pMHC‐TCR binding initiates, or triggers, a signal from TCRs. Multiple competing models have been proposed, none of which fully explains the sensitivity and specificity of TCR triggering. What has been omitted from existing theories is that the pMHC‐TCR interaction at the T cell/APC interface must be under constant mechanical stress, due to the dynamic nature of cell‐cell interaction. Taking this condition into consideration, we propose the receptor deformation model of TCR triggering. In this model, TCR signaling is initiated by conformational changes of the TCR/CD3 complex, induced by a pulling force originating from the cytoskeleton and transmitted through pMHC‐TCR binding interactions with enough strength to resist rupture. By introducing mechanical force into a model of T cell signal initiation, the receptor deformation model provides potential mechanistic solutions to the sensitivity and specificity of TCR triggering. Ma, Z., Janmey, P. A., Finkel, T. H. The receptor deformation model of TCR triggering. FASEB J. 22, 1002–1008 (2008)Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- Newly generated T cell receptor microclusters initiate and sustain T cell activation by recruitment of Zap70 and SLP-76Nature Immunology, 2005
- Modeling T Cell Antigen Discrimination Based on Feedback Control of Digital ERK ResponsesPLoS Biology, 2005
- Agonist/endogenous peptide–MHC heterodimers drive T cell activation and sensitivityNature, 2005
- A single class II myosin modulates T cell motility and stopping, but not synapse formationNature Immunology, 2004
- Direct observation of ligand recognition by T cellsNature, 2002
- Identification of Self Through Two-Dimensional Chemistry and SynapsesAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2001
- The Immunological Synapse: A Molecular Machine Controlling T Cell ActivationScience, 1999
- Serial triggering of many T-cell receptors by a few peptide–MHC complexesNature, 1995
- Kinetics of T-cell receptor binding to peptide/I-Ek complexes: correlation of the dissociation rate with T-cell responsiveness.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Antigen recognition by helper T cells elicits a sequence of distinct changes of their shape and intracellular calciumCurrent Biology, 1994