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BRIEF DEFINITIVE REPORT |
CORRESPONDENCE Ed Palmer: ed.palmer{at}unibas.ch
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ß heterodimer communicates ligand recognition to the CD3 signaling subunits by an unknown mechanism. In thymocytes, we found that both positive- and negative-selecting pMHC ligands expose a cryptic epitope in the CD3 complex upon TCR engagement. This conformational change is induced in vivo and requires the expression of cognate MHC. We conclude that TCR engagement with a cognate pMHC ligand induces a conformational change in the CD3 complex of thymocytes and propose that this marks an initial event during thymic selection that signals the recognition of self-antigen.
T cell development is controlled by CD3 signal transduction, which is initiated when peptideMHC (pMHC) engages the
ß heterodimer of the TCR (1). A unique feature of the TCR is its ability to scan structurally similar pMHC ligands and transmit distinct biochemical signals depending on the strength of the ligand recognized (2, 3). In developing thymocytes, weak TCR ligands induce positive selection and stronger ligands induce negative selection (4). A great deal of work has focused on how the CD3 complex transduces TCR engagement into specific cellular responses. Current models point to TCR oligomerization (5), synapse formation and membrane reorganization (68), recruitment of TCR to membrane rafts (9), and induction of ligand-induced TCRCD3 conformational change (10, 11) to explain the earliest events of TCR signaling. Although the conformational change explanation lies closest to the point of origin, it is also the idea least supported by direct experimental evidence. Crystallographic analysis of pMHCTCR complexes reveals ligand-induced conformational changes in the complementarity determining regions (CDRs) of TCR-variable domains (1214). However, these structural changes are thought to accommodate pMHC binding and with one exception (15) are not accompanied by any corresponding conformational changes of the TCR constant domains. Furthermore, the crystal structures of TCRs bound to variant pMHC ligands have revealed only minor differences in CDR conformation in comparison with nominal peptide ligands (12, 14). These studies argue that conformational changes occurring in the CDR loops may not be communicated to the distal domains of the TCRCD3 complex.
Using a biochemical approach, we previously reported that human CD3 undergoes a conformational change when the TCRCD3 complex is directly bound by certain mAbs but not by others (16). This conformational change uncovered a cryptic epitope on the cytoplasmic tail of CD3
, revealing a polyproline sequence that is a binding site for the SH3.1 domain of the cytosolic adaptor protein, Nck. Whether such a conformational change occurs when cognate pMHC engages TCR has not been directly addressed (17, 18). Here, we found that a conformational change in CD3 was induced by either positive- or negative-selecting pMHCs in vitro and also by endogenous pMHC during thymocyte maturation in vivo. The conformational change within the CD3 complex might be one of the first steps in TCR signaling, indicating that a relevant pMHC ligand has been bound by the
ß heterodimer.
| Results and discussion |
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("open CD3"), which could be bound by the Nck SH3.1 domain in pull-down (PD) assays (16). To determine whether anti-TCRCD3 antibodies induce open CD3 in murine thymocytes, C57BL6 thymocytes were stimulated with anti-TCRß or anti-CD3
mAbs. Postnuclear lysates were subjected to Nck SH3.1 PD and CD3
Western blotting to assess the accessibility of the CD3
polyproline motif in mature, fully assembled TCRCD3 complexes (see Materials and methods, Open CD3 PD and Western blots section). Open CD3 was significantly induced by stimulation with either mAb (Fig. 1 A). PD was blocked by the mAb APA1/1, which is specific for the polyproline region of CD3
(19), but was not blocked by antibodies specific for CD3
, CD3
, or CD3
(Fig. 1 B). Thus, the open configuration in murine CD3 can be induced by antibody binding to the TCRCD3 complex.
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)conjugated polystyrene latex beads. The native complexes on the APA1/1 beads were stained with various PE-conjugated mAbs and analyzed by flow cytometry, similarly to a previously published method (20). Latex beads conjugated to control Ig failed to immunoprecipitate TCRCD3 subunits (unpublished data), and APA1/1 beads failed to capture highly expressed thymocyte proteins such as CD8 and Thy1.2; however, the APA1/1 beads specifically recaptured TCRß, CD3
, CD3
, and CD3
polypeptides (Fig. 1 C). Thus, both TCR and CD3 components are present in the open CD3 complexes.
It was possible that open CD3 exposure was dependent on signal transduction. However, treatment of thymocytes with pervanadate (PV), a strong phosphatase inhibitor and inducer of tyrosine phosphorylation, did not induce open CD3 (Fig. 1 D). Furthermore, thymocyte stimulation with anti-CD3
in the presence of the src kinase inhibitor PP2 failed to inhibit the induction of open CD3 (Fig. 1 E). Finally, even when antibody stimulations were performed at 0°C, open CD3 was still inducible (Fig. 1 F). We conclude that the induction of open CD3 observed in these experiments is independent of tyrosine phosphorylation, src kinase activity, and other signaling and therefore represents a conformational change induced by the binding of antibody to the murine TCRCD3 complex.
Thymocyte TCRCD3 complexes undergo a conformational change when stimulated with agonist pMHC ligands
Using the OT-I transgenic mouse model, we asked whether pMHC presented on APCs induces a conformational change in the CD3 complex of thymocytes. In OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ mice, thymocyte development is blocked at the CD4+ CD8+ double positive (DP) stage due to lack of class I MHC antigen expression. The open CD3 PD assay was performed after the coculture of OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ DP thymocytes with T2-Kb APCs (21) that had been preloaded with various peptides. The peptides pVSV and pFARL, which bind H-2Kb but do not engage the OT-I TCR, failed to induce open CD3 in these cocultures (Fig. 2 A). In contrast, the strong agonist and negative-selecting peptide pOVA induced open CD3 in OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ DP thymocytes (Fig. 2 A). Detection of open CD3 could be competitively blocked by the APA1/1 mAb, verifying that the PD was specific for the cytoplasmic tail of CD3
(Fig. 2 B). Induction of open CD3 by pOVA was peptide dose dependent (Fig. 2 C), with weak detection almost immediately after TCR engagement and maximal detection by 30 min that persisted for several hours (Fig. 2 D).
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Thymic selection induces open CD3 in thymocytes in vivo
We wished to determine whether the endogenous pMHC ligands that mediate thymocyte selection in vivo induced open CD3. The OT-I transgene was bred onto various thymic selection backgrounds: OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ (no TCR engagement, no selection); OT-I ß2m+/+ RAG2/ (positive selection); and OT-I ß2m+/+ RAG2+/+ (positive selection). Without any exogenous stimulation, thymocytes were harvested and lysed, and the lysates were subjected to the open CD3 PD assay. Because the level of TCR expression varied somewhat between strains, analysis was facilitated by loading each lane of the gel with an equal number of "surface TCR equivalents" rather than cell equivalents (Fig. 5). OT-I ß2m+/+ RAG2/ and OT-I ß2m+/+ RAG2+/+ mice displayed significantly enhanced levels of endogenous open CD3, which was above that of the nonselected thymocytes from OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ mice (Fig. 5). It is likely that the open CD3 detected in these experiments originated from thymocytes undergoing (or having undergone) positive selection, because the death of negatively selected thymocytes in vivo removes them from ex vivo assays. This may explain why the detection of open CD3 was less pronounced in OT-I RAG+/+ thymocytes compared with OT-I RAG/ thymocytes (Fig. 5). We conclude that the expression of endogenous pMHC complexes is associated with the induction of open CD3 in thymocytes in vivo.
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ß heterodimers to a spectrum of variant pMHC ligands was recently shown to result in a wide range of heat capacity measurements, an indication of conformational changes and/or structural flexibility (25). However, the observation that pMHC ligands induce an open CD3 conformation was not predicted by most crystallographic studies, because ligand-induced conformational changes in TCR
ß were shown to be restricted to the CDR loops due to an "induced-fit" of the TCR's variable regions at the ligand binding interface (1214). An exception to this was reported in a recently solved crystal structure (15) of the LC13 TCR complexed with its agonist pMHC ligand, which demonstrated a conformational change in a C
region where the TCR
chain potentially interacts with CD3
. It is not clear whether this C
conformational change represents a unique or generalizable phenomenon, because it has not been observed in other TCRMHC crystals (25, 26). Nevertheless, the idea that the
ß heterodimer moves upon engagement with pMHC ligand and that this movement in turn nudges CD3
represents an interesting model of intersubunit communication that is consistent with our observations.
In thymocytes, the open CD3 conformation distinguishes null from signaling pMHCs but is not predictive of signal strength and does not distinguish between ligands capable of mediating positive or negative selection. Open CD3 could mark the initiation of a molecular clock (27, 28), where short TCR occupancy leads to early signals (e.g., positive selection) and long TCR occupancy leads to late signals (e.g., negative selection). Having started the timer, other signals downstream of open CD3 would be required to complete the kinetic measurement of ligand engagement and determine the cellular response. We propose that the open CD3 conformation marks an early molecular signal from the
ß heterodimer to the CD3 complex that a cognate pMHC ligand has been recognized by the TCR. The precise relationship of this conformational change to the initiation of downstream signaling cascades remains to be determined.
| Materials and Methods |
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Antibodies, peptides, and other reagents
Rabbit anti-CD3
serum (s448; reference 19) and anti-phosphotyrosine (4G10; Upstate Biotechnology) were used for Western blots. Anti-CD3
(APA1/1) and anti-CD3
(APA1/2) were described previously (29). Other antibodies included anti-CD3
(2C11), anti-TCRß (H57), anti-CD3
(17A2), anti-CD8ß (535.8), anti-Thy1.2 (30-H12), and anti-CD69 (H1.2F3; BD Biosciences); and anti-CD3
(6B10) and anti-CD3
(C-17; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.). The peptides pFARL (SSIEFARL), pVSV (RGYVYQGL), pE1 (EIINFKEL), pQ7 (SIINFKQL), pQ4 (SIIQFKEL), and pOVA (SIINFKEL) were synthesized as described previously (30).
Thymocyte stimulation
30 x 106 thymocytes were incubated with 10 µg/ml soluble antibody. PV (50 µM) and PP2 (20 µM) treatments were performed as described previously (16). T2-Kb cells (provided by T. Potter, National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver, CO; reference 21) were cultured with exogenous peptide for 3 h at 37°C, washed, and cocultured with 50 x 106 OT-I ß2m/ RAG2/ thymocytes (1:1 ratio). Cells were washed and lysed in 0.3% Brij 58 isotonic buffer; and the postnuclear fractions were subjected to the open CD3 PD assay.
Open CD3 PD and Western blots
The open CD3 PD assay was described previously (16). Samples were subjected to reducing SDS-PAGE (13%) and transferred to PVDF membranes. Mature, fully assembled TCRCD3 complexes were detected by Western blotting with anti-CD3
antiserum s448.
Open CD3 recapture assay
After the open CD3 PD, TCRCD3 complexes were eluted from the beads by incubation in 10 mM reduced glutathione for 1 h at 30°C. Eluates were incubated with APA1/1 covalently bound to 3.2-µm diameter carboxylate-modified polystyrene latex beads (Interfacial Dynamics). The APA1/1 beads recaptured TCRCD3 complexes, which were probed with PE-conjugated antibodies specific for various TCRCD3 subunits, and analyzed by flow cytometry.
Quantitative flow cytometry
Quantitative surface TCR estimates were made using PE-conjugated H57 (1:1 fluorochrome/antibody ratio; BD Biosciences) to stain thymocytes, and microbead fluorescence standards were used for standard curve generation (RCP-30-5; Spherotech).
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by grants to E. Palmer from the Swiss National Science Foundation, Hoffman-LaRoche, Ltd., and Novartis AG. D. Gil was supported by an EMBO postdoctoral fellowship and by Universidad Complutense (Programa Ramón y Cajal and project PR3/04-12454). A.G. Schrum was supported by a Ruth L. Kirschstein NRSA from National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health.
The authors have no conflicting financial interests.
Submitted: 4 October 2004
Accepted: 14 December 2004
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