학술논문

Variant antigenic peptide promotes cytotoxic T lymphocyte adhesion to target cells without cytotoxicity
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. Dec 22, 1998, Vol. 95 Issue 26, p15571, 6 p. Photograph
Subject
Antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity -- Research
Antigenic determinants -- Research
Cell adhesion -- Research
T cells -- Research
Language
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
Timelapse video microscopy has been used to record the motility and dynamic interactions between an H-2[D.sup.b]-restricted murine cytotoxic T lymphocyte clone (F5) and [D.sup.b]-transfected L929 mouse fibroblasts (L[D.sup.b]) presenting normal or variant antigenic peptides from human influenza nucleoprotein. F5 cells will kill L[D.sup.b] target cells presenting specific antigen (peptide NP68: ASNENMDAM) after 'browsing' their surfaces for between 8 min and many hours. Cell death is characterized by abrupt cellular rounding followed by zeiosis (vigorous 'boiling' of the cytoplasm and blebbing of the plasma membrane) for 10-20 min, with subsequent cessation of all activity. Departure of cytotoxic T lymphocytes from unkilled target cells is rare, whereas serial killing is sometimes observed. In the absence of antigenic peptide, cytotoxic T lymphocytes browse target cells for much shorter periods, and readily leave to encounter other targets, while never causing target cell death. Two variant antigenic peptides, differing in nonamer position 7 or 8, also act as antigens, albeit with lower efficiency. A third variant peptide NP34 (ASNENMETM), which differs from NP68 in both positions and yet still binds [D.sup.b], does not stimulate F5 cytotoxicity. Nevertheless, timelapse video analysis shows that NP34 leads to a significant modification of cell behavior, by up-regulating F5-L[D.sup.b] adhesive interactions. These data extend recent studies showing that partial agonists may elicit a subset of the T cell responses associated with full antigen stimulation, by demonstrating that TCR interaction with variant peptide antigens can trigger target cell adhesion and surface exploration without activating the signaling pathway that results in cytotoxicity.