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Innate-Like Control of Human iNKT Cell Autoreactivity via the Hypervariable CDR3β Loop

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2010

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Matulis, Gediminas
Sanderson, Joseph P.
Lissin, Nikolai M.
Asparuhova, Maria B.
Bommineni, Gopal R.
Schümperli, Daniel
Villiger, Peter M.
Jakobsen, Bent K.
Gadola, Stephan D.

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PLoS Biology. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2010, 8(6), e1000402. ISSN 1544-9173. eISSN 1545-7885. Available under: doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000402

Zusammenfassung

Invariant Natural Killer T cells (iNKT) are a versatile lymphocyte subset with important roles in both host defense and immunological tolerance. They express a highly conserved TCR which mediates recognition of the non-polymorphic, lipid-binding molecule CD1d. The structure of human iNKT TCRs is unique in that only one of the six complementarity determining region (CDR) loops, CDR3β, is hypervariable. The role of this loop for iNKT biology has been controversial, and it is unresolved whether it contributes to iNKT TCR:CD1d binding or antigen selectivity. On the one hand, the CDR3β loop is dispensable for iNKT TCR binding to CD1d molecules presenting the xenobiotic alpha-galactosylceramide ligand KRN7000, which elicits a strong functional response from mouse and human iNKT cells. However, a role for CDR3β in the recognition of CD1d molecules presenting less potent ligands, such as self-lipids, is suggested by the clonal distribution of iNKT autoreactivity. We demonstrate that the human iNKT repertoire comprises subsets of greatly differing TCR affinity to CD1d, and that these differences relate to their autoreactive functions. These functionally different iNKT subsets segregate in their ability to bind CD1d-tetramers loaded with the partial agonist α-linked glycolipid antigen OCH and structurally different endogenous β-glycosylceramides. Using surface plasmon resonance with recombinant iNKT TCRs and different ligand-CD1d complexes, we demonstrate that the CDR3β sequence strongly impacts on the iNKT TCR affinity to CD1d, independent of the loaded CD1d ligand. Collectively our data reveal a crucial role for CDR3β for the function of human iNKT cells by tuning the overall affinity of the iNKT TCR to CD1d. This mechanism is relatively independent of the bound CD1d ligand and thus forms the basis of an inherent, CDR3β dependent functional hierarchy of human iNKT cells.

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ISO 690MATULIS, Gediminas, Joseph P. SANDERSON, Nikolai M. LISSIN, Maria B. ASPARUHOVA, Gopal R. BOMMINENI, Daniel SCHÜMPERLI, Richard R. SCHMIDT, Peter M. VILLIGER, Bent K. JAKOBSEN, Stephan D. GADOLA, 2010. Innate-Like Control of Human iNKT Cell Autoreactivity via the Hypervariable CDR3β Loop. In: PLoS Biology. Public Library of Science (PLoS). 2010, 8(6), e1000402. ISSN 1544-9173. eISSN 1545-7885. Available under: doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000402
BibTex
@article{Matulis2010-06-22Innat-56533,
  year={2010},
  doi={10.1371/journal.pbio.1000402},
  title={Innate-Like Control of Human iNKT Cell Autoreactivity via the Hypervariable CDR3β Loop},
  number={6},
  volume={8},
  issn={1544-9173},
  journal={PLoS Biology},
  author={Matulis, Gediminas and Sanderson, Joseph P. and Lissin, Nikolai M. and Asparuhova, Maria B. and Bommineni, Gopal R. and Schümperli, Daniel and Schmidt, Richard R. and Villiger, Peter M. and Jakobsen, Bent K. and Gadola, Stephan D.},
  note={Article Number: e1000402}
}
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