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Cutting Edge: CD1a Tetramers and Dextramers Identify Human Lipopeptide–Specific T Cells Ex Vivo
Author(s) -
Anne Kasmar,
Ildiko Van Rhijn,
Kelly Grace Magalhães,
David C. Young,
TanYun Cheng,
Marie T. Turner,
A. Schiefner,
Ravi C. Kalathur,
Ian A. Wilson,
Mugdha Bhati,
Stéphanie Gras,
Richard W. Birkinshaw,
Li Lynn Tan,
Jamie Rossjohn,
John Shires,
Søren Nyboe Jakobsen,
John D. Altman,
D. Branch Moody
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1301660
Subject(s) - t cell receptor , ex vivo , t cell , recombinant dna , lipopeptide , microbiology and biotechnology , cell sorting , biology , epitope , in vitro , flow cytometry , chemistry , antigen , biochemistry , immunology , gene , bacteria , immune system , genetics
Human CD1a mediates foreign Ag recognition by a T cell clone, but the nature of possible TCR interactions with CD1a/lipid are unknown. After incubating CD1a with a mycobacterial lipopeptide Ag, dideoxymycobactin (DDM), we identified and measured binding to a recombinant TCR (TRAV3/ TRBV3-1, KD of ≈100 μM). Detection of ternary CD1a/lipid/TCR interactions enabled development of CD1a tetramers and CD1a multimers with carbohydrate backbones (dextramers), which specifically stained T cells using a mechanism that was dependent on the precise stereochemistry of the peptide backbone and was blocked with a soluble TCR. Furthermore, sorting of human T cells from unrelated tuberculosis patients for bright DDM-dextramer staining allowed recovery of T cells that were activated by CD1a and DDM. These studies demonstrate that the mechanism of T cell activation by lipopeptides occurs via ternary interactions of CD1a/Ag/TCR. Furthermore, these studies demonstrate the existence of lipopeptide-specific T cells in humans ex vivo.

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