SignificanceAntigen discrimination by T cells is based on subtle differences in binding of the T cell receptor (TCR) for its peptide major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) ligand. While such binding characteristics are readily mapped with great precision in reconstituted biochemical systems, it is less clear how these interactions are affected in the live cell environment. Here we utilize single-molecule imaging to individually resolve all of the pMHC:TCR binding events in live T cells. The quantitative measurements reveal an active feedback mechanism that globally modulates the probability of pMHC:TCR binding throughout the cell–cell interface, without affecting the unbinding rate. The result is to increase the efficiency with which TCRs scan for antigen pMHC after the first few molecular encounters have occurred.
T cell receptor (TCR) binding to agonist peptide major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) triggers signaling events that initiate T cell responses. This system is remarkably sensitive, requiring only a few binding events to successfully activate a cellular response. On average, activating pMHC ligands exhibit mean dwell times of at least a few seconds when bound to the TCR. However, a T cell accumulates pMHC-TCR interactions as a stochastic series of discrete, single-molecule binding events whose individual dwell times are broadly distributed. With activation occurring in response to only a handful of such binding events, individual cells are unlikely to experience the average binding time. Here, we mapped the ensemble of pMHC-TCR binding events in space and time while simultaneously monitoring cellular activation. Our findings revealed that T cell activation hinges on rare, long-dwell time binding events that are an order of magnitude longer than the average agonist pMHC- TCR dwell time. Furthermore, we observed that short pMHC-TCR binding events that were spatially correlated and temporally sequential led to cellular activation. These observations indicate that T cell antigen discrimination likely occurs by sensing the tail end of the pMHC-TCR binding dwell time distribution rather than its average properties.
Cyanylated cysteine, or β-thiocyanatoalanine, is an artificial amino acid that can be introduced into peptides and proteins by post-translational chemical modification of solvent-exposed cysteine side chains, and thus it can be used in any protein with a suitable expression and mutagenesis system. In this study, cyanylated cysteine is introduced at selected sites in two model peptides that have been shown to bind to membrane interfaces: a membrane-binding sequence of the human myelin basic protein and the antimicrobial peptide CM15. Far-UV circular dichroism indicates that the secondary structures of the bound peptides are not influenced by introduction of the artificial side chain. Infrared spectra of both systems in buffer and exposed to dodecylphosphocholine micelles indicate that the CN stretching absorption band of cyanylated cysteine can clearly distinguish between membrane burial and solvent exposure of the artificial side chain. Since infrared spectroscopy can be applied in a wide variety of lipid systems, and since cyanylated cysteine can be introduced into proteins of arbitrary size via mutagenesis and post-translational modification, this new probe could see wide use in characterizing the protein−lipid interactions of membrane proteins.
The synthetic antimicrobial peptide CM15, a hybrid of N-terminal sequences from cecropin and melittin peptides, has been shown to be extremely potent. Its mechanism of action has been speculated to involve pore formation based on prior site-directed spin labeling studies. This study examines four single-site β-thiocyanatoalanine variants of CM15 in which the artificial amino acid side chain acts as a vibrational reporter of its local environment through the frequency and lineshape of the unique CN stretching band in the infrared spectrum. Circular dichroism experiments indicate that the placements of the artificial side chain have only small perturbative effects on the membrane-bound secondary structure of the CM15 peptide. All variant peptides were placed in buffer solution, in contact with dodecylphosphatidylcholine micelles, and in contact with vesicles formed from E. coli polar lipid extract. At each site, the CN stretching band reports a different behavior. Time-dependent attenuated total reflectance infrared spectra were also collected for each variant as it was allowed to remodel the E. coli lipid vesicles. These experiments agree with the previously proposed formation of toroidal pores, in which each peptide finds itself in an increasingly homogeneous and curved local environment without apparent peptide-peptide interactions. This work also demonstrates the excellent sensitivity of the SCN stretching vibration to small changes in peptide-lipid interfacial structure. Keywordsantimicrobial peptides; cyanylated cysteine; nitrile vibrations; membrane-active peptides; sitedirected labeling; toroidal pores Characterizing the structure, structural distribution, and membrane binding geometry of peripheral membrane proteins (PMPs) is a challenge that requires new experimental approaches. Recent advances in crystallography using surfactants(1) and solid state NMR of oriented samples(2) have led to new insights into the structure and function of a number of such proteins and peptides. However, a hallmark of these studies is that the experimental approach used depends to a large extent on the lipid and protein system of interest without a single, unified approach that is applicable to proteins of any size in arbitrary lipid systems. EPR spectroscopy of site-directed spin labels has this sought-after flexibility when applied to PMPs,(3) with documented limitations due to the size and chemical nature of the most typical spin label(4) and the need for external solution-or lipid-phase paramagnetic species to address directly the extent of membrane burial.(3) Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) are a subset of membrane-active species generating much recent interest due to their possible use as antibiotic agents in an era of global overuse of antibiotic drugs.(5) The relative simplicity * to whom correspondence may be addressed; telephone 610-896-1217, fax 610-896-4963, clonderg@haverford.edu. NIH Public Access Author ManuscriptBiochemistry. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2012 December 27. NIH-PA Author Manusc...
The natural peptide-major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) ligand for T cell receptors (TCRs) is inactive from solution yet capable of activating T cells at single-molecule levels when membrane-associated. This distinctive feature stems from the mechanism of TCR activation, which is thought to involve steric phosphatase exclusion as well as direct mechanical forces. It is possible to defeat this mechanism and activate T cells with solution ligands by cross-linking pMHC or using multivalent antibodies to TCR. However, these widely used strategies activate TCRs through a nonphysiological mechanism and can produce different activation profiles than natural, monovalent, membrane-associated pMHC. Here, we introduce a strictly monovalent anti-TCRb H57 Fab' ligand that, when coupled to a supported lipid bilayer via DNA complementation, triggers TCRs and activates nuclear translocation of the transcription factor nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) with a similar potency to pMHC in primary murine T cells. Importantly, like monovalent pMHC and unlike bivalent antibodies, monovalent Fab'-DNA triggers TCRs only when physically coupled to the membrane, and only around 100 individual Fab':TCR interactions are necessary to stimulate early T cell activation.
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