Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands

Low affinity Fcg receptor III (FcgRIII, CD16) triggers a variety of cellular events upon binding to the Fc portion of IgG. A real-time flow cytometry method was developed to measure the affinity and kinetics of such low affinity receptor/ligand interactions, which was shown as an easily operated yet...

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Main Author: Jiang, Ning
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2009
Subjects:
CD8
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26716
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-26716
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-267162013-01-07T20:29:59ZKinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligandsJiang, NingFc receptorCell signalingCD8T cell receptorKineticsReceptor ligand bindingLigands (Biochemistry)Cell receptorsT cells ReceptorsReceptor-ligand complexesLigand binding (Biochemistry)Low affinity Fcg receptor III (FcgRIII, CD16) triggers a variety of cellular events upon binding to the Fc portion of IgG. A real-time flow cytometry method was developed to measure the affinity and kinetics of such low affinity receptor/ligand interactions, which was shown as an easily operated yet powerful tool. Results revealed an unusual temperature dependence of reverse rate of CD16aTM dissociating from IgG. Except for a few studies using mammalian cell CD16s, most kinetics analyses use purified aglycosylated extracellular portion of the molecules, making it impossible to assess the importance of the receptor anchor and glycosylation on ligand binding. We used a micropipette adhesion frequency assay to demonstrate that the anchor length affects the forward rate and affinity of CD16s for IgG in a species specific manner, most likely through conformational changes. Receptor glycosylation dramatically reduced ligand binding by 100 folds. T cell receptor (TCR) is arguably the most important receptor in the adaptive human immune system. Together with coreceptor CD4 or CD8, TCR can discriminate different antigen peptides complexed with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule (pMHC), which differ by as few as only one amino acid, and trigger different T cell responses. When T cell signaling was suppressed, TCR had similar affinity and kinetics for agonist and antagonist pMHC whose binding to CD8 was undetectable. TCR on activated T cell had a higher affinity for pMHCs, suggesting that TCRs organize themselves differently on activated T cells than on naïve T cells. In the absence of inhibitors for signaling, TCR binds agonist pMHC with several orders of magnitude higher affinity than antagonist pMHC. In addition, engagement of TCR by pMHC signals an upregulation of CD8 binding to pMHC, which is much stronger than the TCR-pMHC binding. The transition from weak TCR binding to the strong CD8 binding takes place around 0.75 second after TCR in contact with pMHC and can be reduced by several inhibitors of tyrosine and lipid phosphorylation, membrane rafts, and actin cytoskeleton. These results provide new insights to understanding T cell discrimination.Georgia Institute of Technology2009-01-22T20:39:22Z2009-01-22T20:39:22Z2005-08-12Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/26716en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Fc receptor
Cell signaling
CD8
T cell receptor
Kinetics
Receptor ligand binding
Ligands (Biochemistry)
Cell receptors
T cells Receptors
Receptor-ligand complexes
Ligand binding (Biochemistry)
spellingShingle Fc receptor
Cell signaling
CD8
T cell receptor
Kinetics
Receptor ligand binding
Ligands (Biochemistry)
Cell receptors
T cells Receptors
Receptor-ligand complexes
Ligand binding (Biochemistry)
Jiang, Ning
Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
description Low affinity Fcg receptor III (FcgRIII, CD16) triggers a variety of cellular events upon binding to the Fc portion of IgG. A real-time flow cytometry method was developed to measure the affinity and kinetics of such low affinity receptor/ligand interactions, which was shown as an easily operated yet powerful tool. Results revealed an unusual temperature dependence of reverse rate of CD16aTM dissociating from IgG. Except for a few studies using mammalian cell CD16s, most kinetics analyses use purified aglycosylated extracellular portion of the molecules, making it impossible to assess the importance of the receptor anchor and glycosylation on ligand binding. We used a micropipette adhesion frequency assay to demonstrate that the anchor length affects the forward rate and affinity of CD16s for IgG in a species specific manner, most likely through conformational changes. Receptor glycosylation dramatically reduced ligand binding by 100 folds. T cell receptor (TCR) is arguably the most important receptor in the adaptive human immune system. Together with coreceptor CD4 or CD8, TCR can discriminate different antigen peptides complexed with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule (pMHC), which differ by as few as only one amino acid, and trigger different T cell responses. When T cell signaling was suppressed, TCR had similar affinity and kinetics for agonist and antagonist pMHC whose binding to CD8 was undetectable. TCR on activated T cell had a higher affinity for pMHCs, suggesting that TCRs organize themselves differently on activated T cells than on naïve T cells. In the absence of inhibitors for signaling, TCR binds agonist pMHC with several orders of magnitude higher affinity than antagonist pMHC. In addition, engagement of TCR by pMHC signals an upregulation of CD8 binding to pMHC, which is much stronger than the TCR-pMHC binding. The transition from weak TCR binding to the strong CD8 binding takes place around 0.75 second after TCR in contact with pMHC and can be reduced by several inhibitors of tyrosine and lipid phosphorylation, membrane rafts, and actin cytoskeleton. These results provide new insights to understanding T cell discrimination.
author Jiang, Ning
author_facet Jiang, Ning
author_sort Jiang, Ning
title Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
title_short Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
title_full Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
title_fullStr Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
title_full_unstemmed Kinetic analysis of Fcγ receptor and T cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
title_sort kinetic analysis of fcγ receptor and t cell receptor interacting with respective ligands
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/26716
work_keys_str_mv AT jiangning kineticanalysisoffcgreceptorandtcellreceptorinteractingwithrespectiveligands
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