T cells have a central function in mounting immune responses. However, mechanisms of their early activation by cognate antigens remain incompletely understood. Here we use live-cell multi-colour single-molecule localization microscopy to study the dynamic separation between TCRs and CD45 glycoprotein phosphatases in early cell contacts under TCR-activating and non-activating conditions. Using atomic force microscopy, we identify these cell contacts with engaged microvilli and characterize their morphology, rigidity and dynamics. Physical modelling and simulations of the imaged cell interfaces quantitatively capture the TCR–CD45 separation. Surprisingly, TCR phosphorylation negatively correlates with TCR–CD45 separation. These data support a refined kinetic-segregation model. First, kinetic-segregation occurs within seconds from TCR activation in engaged microvilli. Second, TCRs should be segregated, yet not removed too far, from CD45 for their optimal and localized activation within clusters. Our combined imaging and computational approach prove an important tool in the study of dynamic protein organization in cell interfaces.
The T cell antigen receptor (TCR) has been shown to cluster both before and upon engagement with cognate antigens. However, the effect of TCR clustering on its activation remains poorly understood. Here, we used two-color photo-activated localization microscopy (PALM) to visualize individual molecules of TCR and ZAP-70, as a marker of TCR activation and phosphorylation, at the plasma membrane of uniformly activated T cells. Imaging and second-order statistics revealed that ZAP-70 recruitment and TCR activation localized inside TCR clusters. Live cell PALM imaging showed that the extent of localized TCR activation decreased, yet remained significant, with cell spreading. Using dynamic modeling and Monte-Carlo simulations we evaluated possible mechanisms of localized TCR activation. Our simulations indicate that localized TCR activation is the result of long-range cooperative interactions between activated TCRs, or localized activation by Lck and Fyn. Our results demonstrate the role of molecular clustering in cell signaling and activation, and are relevant to studying a wide range of multi-molecular complexes. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Nanoscale membrane organisation and signalling.
Highlights d IRM and SMLM resolve dynamic molecular patterning in early T cell contacts d Early contacts are sufficient for robust TCR triggering and signal amplification d CD45 segregates from TCR at tight contacts into high localcurvature membrane d Early contacts are both sensing and decision-making entities in T cell activation
Ndd1 activates the Mcm1-Fkh2 transcription factor to transcribe mitotic regulators. The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome activated by Cdh1 (APC/C Cdh1 ) mediates the degradation of proteins throughout G1. Here we show that the APC/C Cdh1 ubiquitinates Ndd1 and mediates its degradation, and that APC/C Cdh1 activity suppresses accumulation of Ndd1 targets. We confirm putative Ndd1 targets and identify novel ones, many of them APC/C Cdh1 substrates. The APC/C Cdh1 thus regulates these proteins in a dual manner-both pretranscriptionally and post-translationally, forming a multi-layered feedforward loop (FFL). We predict by mathematical modelling and verify experimentally that this FFL introduces a lag between APC/C Cdh1 inactivation at the end of G1 and accumulation of genes transcribed by Ndd1 in G2. This regulation generates two classes of APC/C Cdh1 substrates, early ones that accumulate in S and late ones that accumulate in G2. Our results show how the dual state APC/C Cdh1 activity is converted into multiple outputs by interactions between its substrates.
The APC/C (anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome) discovered exactly 15 years ago by Avram Heshko and Marc Kirschner is by far the most complex ubiquitin ligase discovered so far. The APC/C is composed of roughly a dozen subunits and measures a massive 1.5 MDa. This huge complex, as well as its multiple modes of regulation, boasts impressive evolutionary conservation. One of its most puzzling features is its split personality: regulation of mitotic exit events on the one hand, and its ongoing activity during G(1)-phase, G(0)-phase and in terminally differentiated cells. The present short review is intended to provide a basic description of our current understanding of the APC/C, focusing on recent findings concerning its role in G(1)-phase and in differentiated cells.
The secretory signal elicited by membrane depolarization traverses from the Ca2+-bound α11.2 pore-forming subunit of the L-type Ca2+-channel (Cav1.2) to syntaxin 1 A (Sx1A) via an intra-membrane signaling mechanism. Here, we report the use of two-color Photo-Activated-Localization-Microscopy (PALM) to determine the relation between Cav1.2 and Sx1A in single-molecule detail. We observed nanoscale co-clusters of PAmCherry-tagged Sx1A and Dronpa-tagged α11.2 at a ~1:1 ratio. PAmCherry-tagged Sx1AC145A, or PAmCherry-tagged Sx2, an inactive Cav1.2 modulator, in which Cys145 is a Ser residue, showed no co-clustering. These results are consistent with the crucial role of the single cytosolic Sx1ACys145 in clustering with Cav1.2. Cav1.2 and the functionally inactive transmembrane-domain double mutant Sx1AC271V/C272V engendered clusters with a ~2:1 ratio. A higher extent of co-clustering, which coincides with compromised depolarization-evoked transmitter-release, was observed also by oxidation of Sx1ACys271 and Cys272. Our super-resolution-imaging results set the stage for studying co-clustering of the channel with other exocytotic proteins at a single-molecule level.
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