Scientists Create a New Way to Study T Cell
Signaling
from the Berkeley Lab
Research News
BERKELEY, CA – An experiment
that began as a "fantasy pipe dream" just
three years ago is now a reality. Researchers
with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
(Berkeley Lab) and the University of California
at Berkeley, combining nanotechnology with
biochemistry, have created unique synthetic
membranes that, for the first time ever,
enable them to directly control signaling
activity in living T cells from the immune
system. Already their experiments have yielded
surprising results.
"This marriage of inorganic
nanotechnology with organic molecules and cells
enables us to go inside a living cell and physically
move around its signaling molecules with
molecular precision," said Jay
Groves,
a chemist who holds a joint appointment with
Berkeley Lab's Physical Biosciences
Division and UC Berkeley’s Chemistry
Department. "Our experimental beaker
has now become the inside of living cells
and we can watch chemical reactions take
place there."
Groves is the principal co-author,
along with Michael Dustin, a cellular immunologist
at New York University (NYU), of a paper
published in the November 18, 2005 issue
of the journal Science, entitled: "Altered
TCR Signaling from Geometrically Repatterned
Immunological Synapses." The lead author
is Kaspar Mossman, a graduate student in
Groves' research group, and the second
co-author is Gabriele
Campi, a graduate student
at NYU with Dustin.
"Scientists, including
ourselves, have been posing elaborate theories
about how the strength and duration of signals
that activate T cells are controlled by immunological
synapses, without having been able to do
direct experimentation of key factors," said
Groves. "Three years ago, we had this
fantasy pipe dream about an experiment to
measure how alterations in the geometric
shapes of the synapses – what we call
spatial mutations – would affect T
cell signaling. Then we realized, we have
the tools to create nanoscale patterns, we
can do this."
The human immune system is
a remarkable collaboration of different types
of cells, working together to protect our bodies
from bacterial, parasitic, fungal or viral
infections, and against the growth of tumors.
The process starts when "antigens," special
markers on the surface of a cell, identify
another cell as "non-self," and
signal the cellular warriors of the immune
system to kill the invader. Leading this
attack will be the T cells, lymphocytes from
the thymus. It is well established that the
key to T cell activation is the molecular
signal coming off antigen-presenting cell
surfaces. This signal must be enhanced and
sustained long enough for the T cells to
commit to mounting an immune response, and
then must be cut off in time to avoid antigen-induced
cell suicide or "apoptosis" of
the T cells.
It has also been established
that the control center for T cell signaling
is at the junction or point of contact between
T cells and antigens, dubbed the "immunological
synapse" because
it resembles the synapse between two communicating
nerve cells. At the immunological synapse,
a central cluster of T cell receptors surrounded
by a ring of adhesion molecules form what
co-author Dustin has described as a sort
of "bull's-eye." The center
of this bull’s eye has been dubbed
the "central supramolecular activation
cluster," or c-SMAC, because it was
believed to be the source of T cell activation.
"The original idea behind
the c-SMAC was that the larger the T cell receptor
cluster, the stronger the T cell activation
signal," said
Groves. "This simple vision of strength
in numbers had begun to show cracks, and
now we have demonstrated that just the opposite
is true, the coalescence of the c-SMAC cluster
extinguishes the T cell activation signal.
The duration of the activation signal is
related to the spatial organization of the
T cell receptors rather than cluster size."
Groves and his colleagues constructed their
synthetic membranes out of lipids which they
assembled onto a substrate of solid silica
so that the membranes were able to float
freely a few nanometers above the substrate.
This enabled the researchers to preserve
the membranes in their naturally fluid state,
allowing lipids and T cell receptor proteins
to diffuse and interact freely over macroscopic
distances.
"The fluidity of our
membranes created artificial antigen-presenting
cell surfaces that enabled the formation of
functional immunological synapses with living
T cells," said
Groves.
Groves and his colleagues were able to spatially
mutate the geometric shapes of the immunological
synapses by embedding the silica substrate
with chrome lines that were only 100 nanometers
(about one ten-millionth of an inch) wide.
These ultra-narrow chrome lines served as
barriers that restricted the motion of membrane
lipids and T cell receptor proteins. Using
electron-beam lithography, the researchers
were able to configure the chrome lines into
several distinct patterns, including simple
parallel lines, grids, and a series of concentric
hexagons.
"By changing the shape
of the immunological synapse, we showed that
the synapse signal starts out in an amplified
mode, and that the transport of the T cell
receptors towards the center weakens and eventually
extinguishes the signal, irrespective of the
degree of clustering," Groves said. "This
may help explain why diseases of the autoimmune
system are so difficult to treat. T cell
receptor proteins do not respond like a conventional
target, where if you hit the bull’s
eye you trigger a signal. The spatial position
of the receptor determines the type of signal
it triggers."
If scientists can learn more about the impact
that spatial arrangement has on the immunological
synapse and its signaling strength, the information
could benefit the future development of drugs
for treating autoimmune diseases. Such information
should also help scientists better understand
the chemical language by which cells communicate
with one another.
Groves said this new technique for spatial
mutation studies should be applicable to
many intercellular signaling systems. Already,
he and his colleagues have begun applying
it to study neuronal synapse formation, and
cell signaling mechanisms in the development
of cancer. They are also using it to look
at the dynamic range of signaling over which
T cell receptors can respond.
"Essentially, these experiments
amount to using inorganic nanotechnology to
physically grab a protein in a living cell
and move it to another position in that cell – then
watch how the cell responds," said
Groves. "We used it to study the T
cell as a paradigm system, but the theme
here is much more general. Whereas the spatial
position of molecules is rarely thought to
play an important role in the outcome of
a chemical reaction, with our experimental
technique we are seeing that, in living cells,
this is not the case. The spatial position
encodes information which can be directly
translated into altered chemical outcomes."
The earliest indications that
spatial positions could influence T cell signaling
and that the synaptic pattern might actually
help to extinguish the signal came from the
work of Arup Chakraborty,
a chemical engineering professor who, at the
time, held a joint Berkeley Lab/UC Berkeley
appointment and is now with MIT University.
Chakraborty is a pioneer in the use of computer
simulations, called "experiments in silico,"
for studying important problems in cellular
immunology. In 2003, his computational models
indicated that the immunological synapse is
responsible for intense but self-limited T
cell signaling.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy
national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts unclassified scientific
research and is managed by the University
of California. Visit our Website at www.lbl.gov.
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