The early proximal αβ TCR signalosome specifies thymic selection outcome through a quantitative protein interaction network

Steven C. Neier, Alejandro Ferrer, Katelynn M. Wilton, Stephen E.P. Smith, April M.H. Kelcher, Kevin D. Pavelko, Jenna M. Canfield, Tessa R. Davis, Robert J. Stiles, Zhenjun Chen, James McCluskey, Scott R. Burrows, Jamie Rossjohn, Deanne M. Hebrink, Eva M. Carmona, Andrew H. Limper, Dietmar J. Kappes, Peter J. Wettstein, Aaron J. Johnson, Larry R. PeaseMark A. Daniels, Claudia Neuhauser, Diana Gil, Adam G. Schrum

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

During αβ T cell development, T cell antigen receptor (TCR) engagement transduces biochemical signals through a protein-protein interaction (PPI) network that dictates dichotomous cell fate decisions. It remains unclear how signal specificity is communicated, instructing either positive selection to advance cell differentiation or death by negative selection. Early signal discrimination might occur by PPI signatures differing qualitatively (customized, unique PPI combinations for each signal), quantitatively (graded amounts of a single PPI series), or kinetically (speed of PPI pathway progression). Using a novel PPI network analysis, we found that early TCR-proximal signals distinguishing positive from negative selection appeared to be primarily quantitative in nature. Furthermore, the signal intensity of this PPI network was used to find an antigen dose that caused a classic negative selection ligand to induce positive selection of conventional αβ T cells, suggesting that the quantity of TCR triggering was sufficient to program selection outcome. Because previous work had suggested that positive selection might involve a qualitatively unique signal through CD3δ, we reexamined the block in positive selection observed in CD3δ 0 mice. We found that CD3δ 0 thymocytes were inhibited but capable of signaling positive selection, generating low numbers of MHC-dependent αβ T cells that expressed diverse TCR repertoires and participated in immune responses against infection. We conclude that the major role for CD3δ in positive selection is to quantitatively boost the signal for maximal generation of αβ T cells. Together, these data indicate that a quantitative network signaling mechanism through the early proximal TCR signalosome determines thymic selection outcome.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereaal2201
JournalScience immunology
Volume4
Issue number32
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Animals
  • CD3 Complex/genetics
  • Cell Differentiation/immunology
  • Mice
  • Mice, Inbred C57BL
  • Mice, Transgenic
  • Pneumonia, Pneumocystis/immunology
  • Protein Interaction Maps/immunology
  • Proteomics/methods
  • Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta/metabolism
  • Signal Transduction/immunology
  • Theilovirus/immunology
  • Thymocytes/immunology
  • Thymus Gland/metabolism

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