Abstract
CD4+ T cell clones derived from a leprosy lesion and patient blood were used to monitor the isolation and identification of an Ag associated with the self-limited form of the disease. Biochemical purification and genetic analysis identified the T cell Ag as a conserved mycobacterial lipoglycoprotein LprG. LprG-mediated activation of CD4+ T cells required specific MHC class II restriction molecules and intracellular processing. Although LprG activated TLR2, this alone was not sufficient to stimulate or inhibit T cell activation. A striking finding was that the carbohydrate moieties of LprG were required for optimal T cell activation, because recombinant LprG produced in Escherichia coli, or recombinant LprG produced in Mycobacterium smegmatis and digested by α-mannosidase, did not activate T cells. This study demonstrates that the universe of bacterial T cell Ags includes lipoglycoproteins, which act as TLR2 ligands but also require glycosylation for MHC class II-restricted T cell activation in vivo.
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CITATION STYLE
Sieling, P. A., Hill, P. J., Dobos, K. M., Brookman, K., Kuhlman, A. M., Fabri, M., … Modlin, R. L. (2008). Conserved Mycobacterial Lipoglycoproteins Activate TLR2 but Also Require Glycosylation for MHC Class II-Restricted T Cell Activation. The Journal of Immunology, 180(9), 5833–5842. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.180.9.5833
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