2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(284g) Antigen Quality Regulates Signaling and Degradation in the Immunological Synapse
Authors
Jayajit Das - Presenter, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Saso Cemerski, Washington University School of University
Jason W. Locasale, Massachusetts Institute of Techonology
Phoebe Arnold, Washington University School of University
Daved Fremont, Washington University School of University
Paul Allen, Washington University School of University
Andrey S. Shaw, Washington University School of Medicine
Arup K. Chakraborty, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Using in vitro and in silico approaches, we assessed the relationships between TCR signaling, synapse formation, TCR downregulation, and antigen quality. We found that a peptide that exhibits many hallmarks of a weak agonist (shorter half-life than the wild-type ligand, poor receptor downregulation, decreased p23 to p21 phospho-ζ ratio, and inefficient cSMAC formation) could stimulate T cells to proliferate more than the wild-type agonist ligand. Results from a computational model suggested that this is because the immunological synapse regulates the kinetics of signaling differently as antigen quality is varied. Although, in general, TCR signaling decreases for a ligand that binds TCR with a shorter half-life, our data suggest that in some cases, the inability to induce cSMAC formation can enhance the ability of some peptides to signal by attenuating TCR downregulation. We also describe how other parameters (e.g., the on-rate) influences signaling in the immunological synapse.