Roh Kyung-Ho, Lillemeier Björn F, Wang Feng, Davis Mark M
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305; and.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305; and Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA 92037.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Mar 31;112(13):E1604-13. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1503532112. Epub 2015 Mar 17.
CD4 molecules on the surface of T lymphocytes greatly augment the sensitivity and activation process of these cells, but how it functions is not fully understood. Here we studied the spatial organization of CD4, and its relationship to T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) and the active form of Src kinase p56lck (Lck) using single and dual-color photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) and direct stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM). In nonactivated T cells, CD4 molecules are clustered in small protein islands, as are TCR and Lck. By dual-color imaging, we find that CD4, TCR, and Lck are localized in their separate clusters with limited interactions in the interfaces between them. Upon T-cell activation, the TCR and CD4 begin clustering together, developing into microclusters, and undergo a larger scale redistribution to form supramolecluar activation clusters (SMACs). CD4 and Lck localize in the inner TCR region of the SMAC, but this redistribution of disparate cluster structures results in enhanced segregation from each other. In nonactivated cells these preclustered structures and the limited interactions between them may serve to limit spontaneous and random activation events. However, the small sizes of these island structures also ensure large interfacial surfaces for potential interactions and signal amplification when activation is initiated. In the later activation stages, the increasingly larger clusters and their segregation from each other reduce the interfacial surfaces and could have a dampening effect. These highly differentiated spatial distributions of TCR, CD4, and Lck and their changes during activation suggest that there is a more complex hierarchy than previously thought.
T淋巴细胞表面的CD4分子极大地增强了这些细胞的敏感性和激活过程,但其作用机制尚未完全明确。在此,我们运用单双色光激活定位显微镜(PALM)和直接随机光学重建显微镜(dSTORM),研究了CD4的空间组织及其与T细胞抗原受体(TCR)和Src激酶p56lck(Lck)活性形式的关系。在未激活的T细胞中,CD4分子聚集在小的蛋白质岛中,TCR和Lck也是如此。通过双色成像,我们发现CD4、TCR和Lck定位于各自独立的簇中,它们之间的界面相互作用有限。T细胞激活后,TCR和CD4开始聚集在一起,形成微簇,并经历更大规模的重新分布以形成超分子激活簇(SMAC)。CD4和Lck定位于SMAC的TCR内部区域,但这种不同簇结构的重新分布导致它们彼此之间的分离增强。在未激活的细胞中,这些预聚集结构及其之间有限的相互作用可能有助于限制自发和随机的激活事件。然而,这些岛状结构的小尺寸也确保了在激活开始时潜在相互作用和信号放大的大界面。在激活后期,越来越大的簇及其相互分离减少了界面,可能产生抑制作用。TCR、CD4和Lck的这些高度分化的空间分布及其在激活过程中的变化表明,存在比以前认为的更复杂的层级结构。