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CD3ζ ITAMs enable ligand discrimination and antagonism by inhibiting TCR signaling in response to low-affinity peptides.

Guillaume GaudSooraj R AcharFrançois X P BourassaJohn S DaviesTeri HatzihristidisSeeyoung ChoiTaisuke KondoSelamawit GossaJan LeePaul JuneauNaomi TaylorChristian S HinrichsDorian B McGavernPaul FrançoisGrégoire Altan-BonnetPaul E Love
Published in: Nature immunology (2023)
The T cell antigen receptor (TCR) contains ten immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) signaling sequences distributed within six CD3 subunits; however, the reason for such structural complexity and multiplicity is unclear. Here we evaluated the effect of inactivating the three CD3ζ chain ITAMs on TCR signaling and T cell effector responses using a conditional 'switch' mouse model. Unexpectedly, we found that T cells expressing TCRs containing inactivated (non-signaling) CD3ζ ITAMs (6F-CD3ζ) exhibited reduced ability to discriminate between low- and high-affinity ligands, resulting in enhanced signaling and cytokine responses to low-affinity ligands because of a previously undetected inhibitory function of CD3ζ ITAMs. Also, 6F-CD3ζ TCRs were refractory to antagonism, as predicted by a new in silico adaptive kinetic proofreading model that revises the role of ITAM multiplicity in TCR signaling. Finally, T cells expressing 6F-CD3ζ displayed enhanced cytolytic activity against solid tumors expressing low-affinity ligands, identifying a new counterintuitive approach to TCR-mediated cancer immunotherapy.
Keyphrases
  • regulatory t cells
  • nk cells
  • mouse model
  • dendritic cells
  • signaling pathway
  • immune response
  • amino acid