Durable Interactions of T Cells with T Cell Receptor Stimuli in the Absence of a Stable Immunological Synapse

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Abstract

T cells engage in two modes of interaction with antigen-presenting surfaces: stable synapses and motile kinapses. Although it is surmised that durable interactions of T cells with antigen-presenting cells involve synapses, in situ 3D imaging cannot resolve the mode of interaction. We have established in vitro 2D platforms and quantitative metrics to determine cell-intrinsic modes of interaction when T cells are faced with spatially continuous or restricted stimulation. All major resting human T cell subsets, except memory CD8 T cells, spend more time in the kinapse mode on continuous stimulatory surfaces. Surprisingly, we did not observe any concordant relationship between the mode and durability of interaction on cell-sized stimulatory spots. Naive CD8 T cells maintain kinapses for more than 3 hr before leaving stimulatory spots, whereas their memory counterparts maintain synapses for only an hour before leaving. Thus, durable interactions do not require stable synapses. T cells primarily form two types of adhesive junctions when interacting with stimulatory surfaces: stable synapses and motile kinapses. Mayya et al. demonstrate that durable interactions with antigen do not require formation of a stable synapse.

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Mayya, V., Judokusumo, E., Abu Shah, E., Peel, C. G., Neiswanger, W., Depoil, D., … Dustin, M. L. (2018). Durable Interactions of T Cells with T Cell Receptor Stimuli in the Absence of a Stable Immunological Synapse. Cell Reports, 22(2), 340–349. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.12.052

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