Height, but not binding epitope, affects the potency of synthetic TCR agonists

Kiera B. Wilhelm,Shumpei Morita, Darren B. McAffee,Sungi Kim, Mark K. O’Dair,Jay T. Groves

crossref(2021)

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摘要
Under physiological conditions, peptide-MHC (pMHC) molecules can trigger T-cell receptors (TCRs) as monovalent ligands that are sparsely distributed on the plasma membrane of an antigen-presenting cell. TCR can also be activated by artificial clustering, such as with pMHC tetramers or antibodies; however, these strategies circumvent many of the natural ligand discrimination mechanisms of the T cell and can elicit non-physiological signaling activity. We have recently introduced a synthetic TCR agonist composed of an anti-TCRβ Fab’ antibody fragment covalently bound to a DNA oligonucleotide, which serves as a membrane anchor. This Fab’-DNA ligand efficiently activates TCR as a monomer when membrane-associated and exhibits a potency and activation profile resembling agonist pMHC. In this report, we explore the geometric requirements for effective TCR triggering and cellular activation by Fab’-DNA ligands. We find that T cells are insensitive to the ligand binding epitope on the TCR complex, but that length of the DNA tether is important. Increasing the intermembrane distance spanned by Fab’-DNA:TCR complexes decreases TCR triggering efficiency and T cell activation potency, consistent with the kinetic-segregation model of TCR triggering. These results establish design parameters for construction of synthetic TCR agonists that are able to activate polyclonal T cell populations, such as T cells from a human patient, in a similar manner as the native pMHC ligand.STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCEWe report geometric requirements for potent T cell activation by synthetic TCR ligands that mimic biophysical properties of the native pMHC ligand, but have the additional ability to activate polyclonal T cell populations. We find that increasing the space between apposed membranes at TCR binding events decreases ligand potency, but that changing the ligand’s binding epitope on the TCR has essentially no effect. The observed decrease in potency with increased ligand height is attributed to the longer ligands’ attenuated ability to trigger TCR at binding events.
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