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The Human CD8 Coreceptor Effects Cytotoxic T Cell Activation and Antigen Sensitivity Primarily by Mediating Complete Phosphorylation of the T Cell Receptor ζ Chain

Recognition of antigen by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) is determined by interaction of both the T cell receptor and its CD8 coreceptor with peptide-major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) class I molecules. We examine the relative roles of these receptors in the activation of human CTL using mutati...

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Published in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2001-08, Vol.276 (35), p.32786-32792
Main Authors: Purbhoo, Marco A., Boulter, Jonathan M., Price, David A., Vuidepot, Anne-Lise, Hourigan, Christopher S., Dunbar, P. Rod, Olson, Kara, Dawson, Sara J., Phillips, Rodney E., Jakobsen, Bent K., Bell, John I., Sewell, Andrew K.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c343t-9ffd9e82a4ff3d1ba1ac1cc0694ab818e0d792c87b67984da7dd68f71f5c1f53
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container_end_page 32792
container_issue 35
container_start_page 32786
container_title The Journal of biological chemistry
container_volume 276
creator Purbhoo, Marco A.
Boulter, Jonathan M.
Price, David A.
Vuidepot, Anne-Lise
Hourigan, Christopher S.
Dunbar, P. Rod
Olson, Kara
Dawson, Sara J.
Phillips, Rodney E.
Jakobsen, Bent K.
Bell, John I.
Sewell, Andrew K.
description Recognition of antigen by cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) is determined by interaction of both the T cell receptor and its CD8 coreceptor with peptide-major histocompatibility complex (pMHC) class I molecules. We examine the relative roles of these receptors in the activation of human CTL using mutations in MHC class I designed to diminish or abrogate the CD8/pMHC interaction. We use surface plasmon resonance to determine that point mutation of the α3 loop of HLA A2 abrogates the CD8/pMHC interaction without affecting the affinity of the T cell receptor/pMHC interaction. Antigen-presenting cells expressing HLA A2 which does not bind to CD8 fail to activate CTL at any peptide concentration. Comparison of CTL activation by targets expressing HLA A2 with normal, abrogated, or diminished CD8/pMHC interaction show that the CD8/pMHC interaction enhances sensitivity to antigen. We determine that the biochemical basis for coreceptor dependence is the activation of the 23-kDa phosphoform of the CD3ζ chain. In addition, we produce mutant MHC class I multimers that specifically stain but do not activate CTL. These reagents may prove useful in circumventing undesirable activation-related perturbation of intracellular processes when pMHC multimers are used to phenotype antigen-specific CD8+ lymphocytes.
doi_str_mv 10.1074/jbc.M102498200
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ispartof The Journal of biological chemistry, 2001-08, Vol.276 (35), p.32786-32792
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subjects Amino Acid Sequence
Animals
Antigens, CD - immunology
CD8 antigen
CD8 Antigens - immunology
Cell Line
Cells, Cultured
histocompatibility antigen HLA
Histocompatibility Antigens Class I - immunology
HIV Infections - blood
HIV Infections - immunology
HIV-1 - immunology
HLA-A2 Antigen - chemistry
HLA-A2 Antigen - immunology
Humans
Kinetics
Lymphocyte Activation - immunology
Major Histocompatibility Complex
Membrane Proteins - immunology
Membrane Proteins - metabolism
Mice
Peptide Fragments - chemistry
Peptide Fragments - immunology
Phosphorylation
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell - immunology
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell - metabolism
Surface Plasmon Resonance
T-Lymphocytes, Cytotoxic - immunology
title The Human CD8 Coreceptor Effects Cytotoxic T Cell Activation and Antigen Sensitivity Primarily by Mediating Complete Phosphorylation of the T Cell Receptor ζ Chain
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