Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2035317 | Cell | 2014 | 12 Pages |
•Single-cell assay for concurrent measurement of in situ kinetics and Ca2+ signaling•Force prolongs lifetimes of TCR bonds with agonists, but not less active pMHCs•Both the magnitude and the duration of force are important for Ca2+ triggering•T cell signaling requires early and rapid accumulation of TCR-pMHC bond lifetimes
SummaryTCR-pMHC interactions initiate adaptive immune responses, but the mechanism of how such interactions under force induce T cell signaling is unclear. We show that force prolongs lifetimes of single TCR-pMHC bonds for agonists (catch bonds) but shortens those for antagonists (slip bonds). Both magnitude and duration of force are important, as the highest Ca2+ responses were induced by 10 pN via both pMHC catch bonds whose lifetime peaks at this force and anti-TCR slip bonds whose maximum lifetime occurs at 0 pN. High Ca2+ levels require early and rapid accumulation of bond lifetimes, whereas short-lived bonds that slow early accumulation of lifetimes correspond to low Ca2+ responses. Our data support a model in which force on the TCR induces signaling events depending on its magnitude, duration, frequency, and timing, such that agonists form catch bonds that trigger the T cell digitally, whereas antagonists form slip bonds that fail to activate.
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