By
From the * Johns Hopkins University, Department of Pathology and Medicine, Division of
Immunopathology, Baltimore, Maryland 21205; Section of Immunobiology, Yale University
School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520; and § Laboratoire d'Immunologic
Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec H2W 1R7, Canada
Understanding the regulation of cell surface expression of specific peptide-major histocompatibility complex (MHC) complexes is hindered by the lack of direct quantitative analyses of specific peptide-MHC complexes. We have developed a direct quantitative biochemical approach
by engineering soluble divalent T cell receptor analogues (TCR-Ig) that have high affinity for
their cognate peptide-MHC ligands. The generality of this approach was demonstrated by specific staining of peptide-pulsed cells with two different TCR-Ig complexes: one specific for
the murine alloantigen 2C, and one specific for a viral peptide from human T lymphocyte virus-1 presented by human histocompatibility leukocyte antigens-A2. Further, using 2C TCR- Ig, a more detailed analysis of the interaction with cognate peptide-MHC complexes revealed
several interesting findings. Soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig detected significant changes in the
level of specific antigenic-peptide MHC cell surface expression in cells treated with -interferon (
-IFN). Interestingly, the effects of
-IFN on expression of specific peptide-MHC
complexes recognized by 2C TCR-Ig were distinct from its effects on total H-2 Ld expression;
thus, lower doses of
-IFN were required to increase expression of cell surface class I MHC
complexes than were required for upregulation of expression of specific peptide-MHC complexes. Analysis of the binding of 2C TCR-Ig for specific peptide-MHC ligands unexpectedly
revealed that the affinity of the 2C TCR-Ig for the naturally occurring alloreactive, putatively,
negatively selecting, complex, dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3, is very low, weaker than 71 µM. The affinity
of the 2C TCR for the other naturally occurring, negatively selecting, alloreactive complex,
p2Ca-H-2 Ld, is ~1000-fold higher. Thus, negatively selecting peptide-MHC complexes do
not necessarily have intrinsically high affinity for cognate TCR. These results, uniquely revealed by this analysis, indicate the importance of using high affinity biologically relevant cognates, such as soluble divalent TCR, in furthering our understanding of immune responses.
Antigenic specificity of cellular immune responses is
controlled by the recognition of a particular peptide-
MHC complex by the clonotypic T cell receptor. Identification and quantitation of peptide-MHC complexes on
the surface of APCs, both in vitro and in vivo, have been
difficult. This difficulty is due to a variety issues: the low
number of specific peptide-MHC complexes on individual
APCs; the low intrinsic affinity of soluble probes for specific peptide-MHC complexes; and the nonquantitative, indirect nature of cellular readouts. Although cellular assays
have greatly facilitated analysis of peptide-MHC complex
expression, these assays, which involve readouts such as cytolysis, lymphokine secretion, or cell proliferation, are not exclusively dependent upon specific antigenic peptide-MHC
complexes, but are also highly influenced by differences in
costimulation (1, 2). The complexities associated with cellular-based assays have led investigators to develop biochemical analogues to directly analyze peptide-MHC expression.
Several approaches have been taken to study expression
of specific peptide-MHC complexes using soluble ligands.
A traditional soluble ligand-based approach is to generate
mAbs specific for particular peptide-MHC complexes. Although theoretically this approach is appealing, practically,
only a few such antibodies with high enough specificity for
a particular peptide-MHC class I or class II complexes have
been generated (3). Recently a new approach using a recombinant antibody phage display library was used to generate a relatively low affinity Fab antibody that was specific
for a particular peptide-MHC complex (8). A second approach has entailed using soluble TCR analogues. A variety
of different approaches have been used to develop soluble
analogues of TCR (for review see reference 9). Similar to the
natural peptide-MHC specificity of T cells, soluble versions of TCR have the requisite peptide specificity useful
in probing specific antigenic peptide-MHC complexes. Although these reagents have been invaluable in defining the
basic biochemistry involved in TCR interaction with peptide-MHC complexes (10), the intrinsic low affinity of
these reagents limits their use in the direct identification and quantitation of peptide-MHC complexes.
The relationship between the affinity of a TCR for a
specific peptide-MHC complex and the physiologic responses of T cells is poorly understood. In the 2C system,
this is particularly relevant since, using CTL-based assays,
several naturally occurring and synthetically derived cognate peptide-MHC ligands have been defined (13).
However, the affinity of the 2C TCR for only one of the known naturally occurring cognate peptide-MHC ligands
has been measured (12, 14). Specifically, the 2C TCR is alloreactive on two different MHC complexes (18), H-2
Ld and H-2 Kbm3. Both H-2 Ld and H-2 Kbm3 mediate negative selection of the 2C TCR in 2C transgenic mice (20).
With regard to the alloresponse on H-2 Kbm3, a single
HPLC peak containing one peptide, dEV-8, that can mediate lysis of H-2 Kbm3 target cells by 2C CTL has been defined (21, 22). This complex is the presumptive peptide-
MHC complex involved in negative selection of the 2C TCR
in H-2 Kbm3 mice and might be expected to be of high affinity. Soluble, high affinity probes for specific peptide-MHC
complexes can be used to gain insights into the relationship
between the affinity of a TCR for a specific peptide-MHC
complex and the biological impact that same peptide-
MHC complex has on T cells.
Soluble, high affinity probes for specific peptide-MHC
complexes were developed, in part, to study the role of lymphokines such as We have developed a general system for expression of
soluble high affinity TCR analogues. Using Ig as a molecular scaffold, soluble divalent TCR analogues were generated
and used to analyze the interaction with cognate peptide-
MHC complexes. The system utilized used the 2C TCR
which is derived from alloreactive 2C CTL (13, 29) and
the A6 TCR, which is specific for a viral peptide derived
from the HTLV-1 tax protein (30, 31). The divalent nature
of the TCR analogue significantly increased the affinity for
peptide-MHC complexes while retaining the peptide specificity of the native TCR. (Since TCR-Ig was designed as a probe for peptide-MHC complexes its effective affinity/
avidity for such complexes is more relevant than the intrinsic affinity of each TCR combining site for specific peptide-
MHC complexes. For this reason, we refer to the effective
affinity/avidity of 2C TCR-Ig for peptide-MHC complexes simply as affinity throughout the text.) Due to this
increased affinity, TCR-Ig chimeras were useful in direct
flow cytometry experiments to detect specific peptide-
MHC complexes. Using the 2C TCR-Ig, we have analyzed the correlation between affinity of the TCR for specific
peptide-MHC complexes and lysis of target cells expressing
the same peptide-MHC complexes. Furthermore, using
2C TCR-Ig, we were also able to directly analyze the
modulatory effects of Cells and Culture Conditions
RMA-S, RMA-S Ld, T2, T2 Kb, T2 Kbm3, T2 Kbm11, and
RENCA cells were maintained by 1:10 passage three times
weekly in RPMI-1640 supplemented with 2 mM glutamine,
nonessential amino acids, 50 µg/ml of gentamicin, 5 × 10 Expression of Soluble Divalent TCR Analogues
The details of construction, expression, purification, and characterization of soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig and A6 TCR-Ig
were carried out as described elsewhere (O'Herrin, S.M., M.S.
Lebowitz, and J.P. Schneck, manuscript in preparation). In brief,
to generate the soluble divalent TCR, cDNAs encoding the
TCR
Biochemical Analysis of Soluble TCR-Ig
The chimeric TCR-IgG proteins were detected by ELISA assays specific for the chimeric protein. The primary antibody used
was specific for murine IgG1 Fc and a biotinylated second antibody was either mAb 1B2 (29, 32), a murine mAb specific for a
clonotypic epitope expressed on 2C TCR, or the anti-human
V Peptide Loading of Cells
RMA-S and T2 cell lines are defective in antigen processing
and express functionally "empty" class I MHC on their cell surface (33, 34). These empty MHC molecules may be loaded with peptides as described (35, 36). In brief, cells (RMA-S, RMA-S Ld,
T2, T2 Ld, T2 Kb, T2 Kbm3 or T2 Kbm11) were cultured at 27°C
overnight. Subsequently, cells were incubated in the presence or
absence of various antigenic peptides (100 µM final concentration) for an additional 1.5 h at 27°C and then for 1 h at 37°C.
RENCA cells were loaded with peptides by incubation with
peptides (100 µM final concentration) for >2 h at 37°C. Cells were then harvested and processed for FACS® (Becton Dickinson, San
Jose, CA) analysis as described.
All peptides were made by the Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, MD) biopolymer laboratory peptide synthesis facility by F-MOC chemical synthesis and then purified by preparative
HPLC. Sequences were confirmed by amino acid analysis and protein sequencing. Sequences of the peptides and the known affinities of monovalent 2C TCR for specific peptide-H-2 Ld complexes are shown in Table 1. The HLA-A2-restricted peptides used
were: the HTLV-1-derived peptide tax (37), LLFGYPVYV, and the influenza-derived peptide, M1, GILGFVFTL.
Table 1.
Peptides Used in this Study: Their Reported Effectiveness in 2C CTL Assays and Affinities of 2C TCR for Peptide-MHC
Complexes
-IFN on antigen expression.
-IFN is
known to have multiple sites of action that regulate expression of peptide-class I MHC complex expression (23).
-IFN is known to impact on antigen presentation by increasing transcription of both class I heavy chain and TAP
(transporter associated with antigen processing) genes (23).
-IFN also regulates the proteasome by controlling expression of low molecular mass polypeptide (LMP)2, LMP7,
and the proteasome regulator PA28
(25). Recent studies
have shown that induction of the proteasome regulator
PA28
influences both the amount and sequence of peptides generated by the proteasome (24, 28). It is not clear if
the effects of
-IFN on different parts of the antigen processing pathway are coordinated. Is the effect of
-IFN on
increased expression of class I heavy chain seen at the same
dose of
-IFN as are effects on increases in specific antigen-MHC complex expression? This is an important issue
as discordant effects of
-IFN may have implications for understanding the influence of
-IFN immune responses.
The development of a high affinity reagent could be used to
analyze the impact
-IFN on endogenous antigen-MHC
complex expression.
-IFN on expression of endogenous
2C TCR reactive peptide-MHC complexes.
5 M
2-mercaptoethanol, and 10% fetal calf serum.
and
chains were genetically linked via glycine/serine
spacer to cDNAs encoding IgG1 heavy chains and kappa light
chains, respectively (see Fig. 1 for protein schematic). Soluble
monovalent 2C TCR was made and purified as previously described (12).
Fig. 1.
Proposed structure and biochemical characterization of soluble divalent TCR-Ig chimeras. A schematic of the chimeric protein showing the TCR- polypeptide (heavily shaded) linked to IgG1 heavy
chain and TCR-
polypeptide (lightly shaded) linked to Ig kappa light
chain is shown in A. The linkers between the chimeric chains consist of
glycine/serine spacers. Presumptive binding sites of mAb 1B2, an anticlonotypic 2C TCR-specific mAb, and anti-human V
13.1-specific mAb
on the putative TCR-Ig structures are also noted. Detection of chimeras in
baculovirus supernatants (Fig. 1, B and C). Plates were coated with goat
anti-mouse Fc. For detection of TCR-Ig, the secondary antibody was biotinylated and consisted of either the anti 2C mAb, 1B2 (B) or the anti-
human V
13.1 TCR-specific mAb H131.21Y (C).
[View Larger Versions of these Images (25 + 29K GIF file)]
13.1, H131.21Y (see Fig. 1 for the proposed mAb binding
sites). Wells were incubated with the primary antibody, 10 µg/
ml, for 1 h at room temperature, and then blocked with a 2%
BSA solution before use. After three washes with PBS containing
0.05% Tween 20 and 1% FCS, culture supernatants (100 µl) from
baculovirus infected cells containing the soluble divalent TCR-Ig
were incubated for 1 h at room temperature. Plates were then
washed extensively and then incubated with the biotinylated second antibody. When using biotinylated second antibody, wells
were incubated with 100 µl 10% mouse serum for an additional hour to reduce background reactivity. After 1 h incubation with the biotinylated antibody, the plates were washed and incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated strepavidin (100 µl of a
1:10,000 dilution) for 1 h, washed, and developed with 3,3
,5,5
-tetramethylbenzidine dihydrochloride (TMB) substrate for 3-5
min. The reaction was stopped by the addition of 1 M H2SO4
and optical density was measured at 450 nm.
Peptide name
Peptide sequence
MHC restriction
2C-mediated lysis
Kd
µM
p2Ca
LSPFPFDL
H-2 Ld
+++
0.5-0.1
QL9
QLSPFPFDL
H-2 Ld
++++
0.066
SL9
LSPFPFDLL
H-2 Ld
+/
71
tum
TQNHRALDL
H-2 Ld
na
na
pMCMV
YPHFMPTNL
H-2 Ld
nd
gp 70
SPSYVYHQF
H-2 Ld
na
na
dEV-8
EQYKFYSV
H-2 Kb
Unknown
dEV-8
-
H-2 Kbm3
+++
Unknown
SIY
SIYRYYGL
H-2 Kb
+++
Unknown
SIY
-
H-2 Kbm3
Unknown
Unknown
pVSV NP(52-59)
RGYVYQGL
H-2 Kb
nd
na, not available; nd, none detected (the affinity was below the sensitivity of the assay used).
Peptides listed are a collection of H-2 Ld- and H-2 Kb-binding peptides used in analysis of the reactivity of the soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig. Lysis
and affinity data are summarized from their primary references (12, 14, 15, 17, 22, 57).
Direct Flow Microfluorimetry
For analysis of 2C TCR-Ig specificity, ~3 × 105 peptide-loaded or control cells were incubated for 60 min at 4°C with either ~50 µg/ml mAb 30.5.7 culture supernatants in a 30-50 µl volume, 50 µl of 2C TCR-Ig culture supernatants (10 µg/ml final concentration), or 25-50 µg/ml purified 2C TCR-Ig in a 30 µl volume. For analysis of A6 TCR-Ig specificity, ~3 × 105 peptide-loaded or control cells were incubated for 60 min on ice with either ~50 µg/ml of the HLA-A2-reactive mAb BB7.2, or 50 µl of A6 TCR-Ig culture supernatants (1-10 µg/ml final concentration). Cells were then washed once in 1× PBS, 1% FBS, and 0.02% Na-azide (wash buffer), and then incubated for an additional 60 min at 4°C in 20 µl of a 1/40 dilution goat anti- mouse IgG-red algae phycoerythrin (Southern Biotechnology Assoc., Inc., Birmingham, AL). Cells were subsequently washed once with wash buffer, resuspended in 250 µl wash buffer and analyzed on a FACScan® flow cytometer.
Measurement of the Affinity of Soluble 2C TCR for H-2 Ld Molecules
Affinities of soluble 2C TCR analogues for peptide loaded cells were determined in a competition assay with FITC-30.5.7 Fab similar to one previously described (38). 30.5.7 is a mAb that recognizes an epitope near the peptide-exposed face of H-2Ld; thus 30.5.7 and 2C TCR compete for binding to the peptide exposed face of H-2Ld. Kd of 30.5.7 Fab for peptide-loaded RMA-S Ld cells were determined as follows. Cells (0.3 × 106/10 µl) were loaded with peptide as described above. Subsequently, peptide-loaded or control cells were incubated with varying concentrations of FITC-30.5.7 Fab for 1 h at 4°C, and then diluted 1:6 with wash buffer immediately before analysis by flow cytometry. Kd were estimated from a plot of 1/(mean channel fluorescence) versus 1/[FITC-30.5.7 Fab].
Affinities of 2C TCR analogues were determined by competition with constant concentrations of FITC-30.5.7 Fab. Cells were loaded with peptide, and subsequently incubated with a constant concentration of FITC-30.5.7 Fab and varying concentrations of 2C TCR analogues for 1 h at 4°C. Cells were diluted 1:6 with wash buffer immediately before analysis by flow cytometry. Maximal inhibition of FITC-30.5.7 Fab binding was determined by incubation in the presence of 30.5.7 mAb (75 µg). Kapp was determined from a plot of 1/(percent maximal inhibition) versus [2C TCR analogue]. Kapp was corrected for the affinity of FITC-30.5.7 Fab for peptide loaded cells according to the equation Kd,TCR = Kapp/(1 + ([FITC 30.5.7 Fab]/Kd,30.5.7)) (38).
CTL Experiments
Generation of CTLs. Splenocytes from 2C TCR transgenic mice (18) were resuspended at 1.25 × 106/ml and stimulated with 1.75 × 106 BALB/c splenocytes that had been exposed to 3,000 cGy radiation. On day 7, the 2C T cell-enriched cultures were restimulated at 5 × 105/ml with 2.5 × 106/ml BALB/c splenocytes. Experiments were performed on this and subsequent stimulation on day 4. All subsequent stimulation was performed with 3.75 × 105/ml 2C splenocytes and 2.5 × 106/ml BALB/c cells in the presence of IL-2 (5 U/ml).
CTL assays.
Assays were performed in triplicate according to
established CTL protocols. In brief, target cells (2-4 × 106) were
incubated with 100 µCi 51Cr at 37°C for 1 h. After three washes,
cells were added to V-bottomed 96-well plates (3 × 103/100 µl)
and incubated (25°C for 1.5 h) with peptides at the indicated concentrations. 2C T cells (3 × 104/100 µl) were added to targets and plates were incubated at 37°C for 4.5 h. Maximum release was achieved by incubating targets with 5% Triton-X 100. Percent specific lysis was calculated from raw data using ([experimental release spontaneous release]/[maximum release
spontaneous release]) × 100.
The well-characterized 2C TCR was chosen as a
model system for constructing soluble divalent TCR. 2C is
an alloreactive, peptide-specific CTL clone derived from
H-2b-expressing mice (29). This clone is specific for a naturally processed endogenous peptide, p2Ca, derived from
-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase bound by the murine class I
molecule H-2 Ld (13). The importance of this response can
be seen by the fact that p2Ca-like peptides are known to
dominate certain murine alloreactive responses in strains
expressing V
8+ TCR (39). Both higher affinity, peptide
QL9, and lower affinity, peptide SL9, variants of p2Ca reactive with 2C cells also have been generated (Table 1; references 14, 15). In addition, to peptide/H-2 Ld ligands for
2C TCR, two peptides that sensitize either H-2 Kb or H-2
Kbm3 targets for lysis by 2C CTLs have also been defined
(17, 22). dEV-8 is a peptide isolated from H-2 Kbm8 target
cells that induces effective lysis of H-2 Kbm3 targets by 2C
CTL (22). The deduced sequence of dEV-8 matches that
of an endogenous peptide derived from the mitochondrial
MLRQ protein. Another peptide, SIYRYYGL (SIY), was
isolated from a random peptide library on the basis of its
ability to mediate strong lysis of H-2 Kb target cells by 2C-CTL (17). This series of peptides facilitates the study of soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig chimeras on a variety of different peptide-MHC ligands representing a wide range of affinities for the 2C TCR.
The TCR derived from the HTLV-specific CTL clone A6 was chosen as another model system. HTLV-1-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) is a paralytic disease associated with HTLV-1 infection (40, 41). In patients with HAM/TSP, an extremely high frequency of HTLV-1-specific T cells has been seen, up to 40-280-fold higher than in asymptomatic patients (37, 41). A dominant peptide antigen derived from the HTLV-1 tax protein, recognized by virus specific CTLs, has been defined in a subset of the patients, those who express HLA-A2 (31, 42). Although CTL responses to the dominant tax-derived peptide and variants thereof have been identified, no affinity measurements for the interaction of the A6 TCR with cognate peptide-HLA-A2 complexes have been reported (30, 43). Thus, this system also represents an interesting one for analysis using soluble high affinity divalent TCR-Ig complexes.
To generate soluble divalent TCRs, cDNAs encoding
the TCR and
chains were genetically linked to cDNAs
encoding IgG1 heavy chains and kappa light chains, respectively (see Fig. 1 A for protein schematic and O'Herrin,
S.M., M.S. Lebowitz, and J.P. Schneck, manuscript in
preparation, for details of construction). For expression,
Trichoplusia ni. cells were infected with a baculovirus expression vector encoding the soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig
constructs. Chimeric 2C TCR-Ig and A6 TCR-Ig could
be easily purified from culture supernatants and retained
epitopes associated with Ig portions of the molecule
(O'Herrin, S.M., M.S. Lebowitz, and J.P. Schneck, manuscript in preparation).
The chimeric TCR-Ig proteins are conformationally intact (Fig. 1 B and C). The soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig was
reactive with 1B2, the anti-clonotypic mAb determinant specific for the 2C TCR (Fig. 1 B) as well as with H57, a mAb
specific for a conformational epitope expressed on murine
TcR C chains (data not shown). Soluble divalent A6 TCR-
Ig was reactive only with the V
13.1-specific mAb, H131.21Y
(Fig. 1 C) and, as expected, not reactive with mAb 1B2
(Fig. 1 B). Control baculovirus infected supernatants were not reactive with either of the mAb (Fig. 1, B and C).
Based on the divalent nature of the soluble TCR-Ig complexes, we postulated that the molecules would have a high affinity for cognate peptide-MHC complexes. The high affinity of the soluble divalent TCR analogues could make them useful in analysis of peptide-MHC complexes by routine direct flow cytometry-based assays. Because of their intrinsic low affinity, soluble monovalent TCR analogues have routinely not been useful in direct flow cytometry-based assays. To study peptide specificity of TCR-Ig, we compared reactivity of 2C TCR-Ig with that of H-2 Ld reactive mAb 30.5.7, and A6 TCR-Ig with that of BB7.2, in direct flow cytometry- based assays.
The temperature-dependent reactivity of RMA-S Ld
with 2C TCR-Ig was significantly different than the reactivity of RMA-S Ld with mAb 30.5.7. As expected (44, 45),
RMA-S Ld cells, cells that express empty MHC molecules,
expressed more serologically reactive H-2 Ld molecules
recognized by mAb 30.5.7 on cells cultured at 27°C than
when cells were cultured at 37°C (Fig. 2 A); mean channel fluorescence (MCF)1 increased approximately fivefold.
Thus, the epitope on H-2 Ld molecules recognized by mAb
30.5.7 can be stabilized by incubating cells at low temperatures. In contrast, RMA-S Ld cells expressed very low
amounts of H-2 Ld molecules recognized by 2C TCR-Ig
on cells cultured at either 27 or at 37°C (Fig. 2, E). This
finding is consistent with the expected peptide-dependent
reactivity of 2C TCR-Ig which should not recognize
MHCs that have not been pulsed with peptides even when
conformationally stabilized by decreased temperature.
2C TCR-Ig reactivity showed exquisite peptide specificity.
Peptides (see Table 1 for sequences) were loaded into
empty H-2 Ld molecules on RMA-S Ld cells. As expected,
all H-2 Ld-binding peptides stabilized expression of the
epitope recognized by mAb 30.5.7 (Fig. 2, B-D and Fig. 3).
Only H-2 Ld molecules loaded with 2C-reactive peptides,
peptides p2Ca, QL9, and SL9, expressed peptide/H-2Ld
epitopes that reacted with 2C TCR-Ig (Fig. 2, F-H and
Fig. 3). MCF increased ~10-200-fold, from an MCF of 10 for either unloaded cells or cells loaded with an irrelevant
H-2 Ld-binding peptide, to as high as 2,200 for RMA-S Ld
cells loaded with peptide QL9 (Fig. 3). The pattern of reactivity mimicked the known affinities of monovalent 2C TCR
for peptide-H-2 Ld complexes (see Table 1 for affinities).
RMA-S Ld cells loaded with peptide QL9, p2Ca, or SL9
had MCF values of 2,200, 550, and 100, respectively,
when stained with 2C TCR-Ig. Thus, soluble divalent 2C
TCR-Ig chimeras reacted strongly with QL9-H-2 Ld
complexes, modestly with p2Ca-H-2 Ld complexes, and
weakly with SL9-H-2 Ld complexes. The fact that 2C
TCR-Ig bound to SL9-loaded H-2 Ld molecules indicates
that even in a direct flow cytometry assay, soluble divalent
2C TCR-Ig chimeras could be used to detect specific peptide-MHC complexes that have affinities as weak as 71 µM for monovalent 2C TCR.
A6 TCR-Ig also demonstrated peptide specificity. This
was studied by peptide-loading T2 cells, a human HLA-A2
positive cell line that expresses empty MHC molecules and
can be readily loaded with specific peptides of interest (46,
47). When T2 cells were loaded with different peptides,
only cells loaded the A6-reactive peptide derived from tax
11-19, LLFGYPVYV, reacted with A6 TCR-Ig (Fig. 4, C
and D). MCF increased ~20-fold, from an MCF of 21 for either unloaded cells or cells loaded with an irrelevant
HLA-A2-binding peptide, M1, to 357 for T2 cells loaded
with the tax peptide. As expected, all HLA-A2-binding
peptides stabilized expression of the epitope recognized by
mAb BB7.2 (Fig. 4, A and B).
The peptide specificity of these two disparate TCR-Ig chimeras indicates that the approach is a general one applicable to multiple different TCRs. Soluble divalent TCR- Ig chimeras have sufficiently high affinity to allow staining of cognate peptide-MHC ligands in direct flow cytometry-based assays.
Affinity Measurements of Soluble Divalent TCR Interaction with Peptide-MHC Complexes.To directly analyze the impact of the divalent nature of TCR-Ig on affinity, a competitive inhibition assay was developed to measure the affinity of soluble 2C TCR analogues for peptide-MHC complexes. This assay, similar to one previously used to determine the affinity of soluble monovalent 2C TCR for
peptide-MHC complexes (38), is based on mAb 30.5.7 binding to a region of the 2 helix of H-2 Ld that overlaps
with TCR receptor binding (44, 45). Hence, the affinity of
soluble TCR analogues can be measured in terms of their
inhibition of 30.5.7 binding.
To determine the affinity of the soluble 2C TCR analogues, one has to first determine the Kd of 30.5.7 Fab fragments for peptide-loaded H-2 Ld molecules. This measurement was determined by direct saturation analysis of 30.5.7-FITC Fab binding to H-2 Ld molecules on the surface of RMA-S Ld cells. RMA-S cells were chosen since these cells express empty MHC molecules that can be readily loaded with specific peptides of interest (36, 48). The affinity of 30.5.7 for H-2 Ld molecules is dependent on the peptide loaded into H-2 Ld (Table 2). The affinity of the 30.5.7 for QL9-loaded H-2 Ld molecules is 12.2 nM, whereas the affinities for p2Ca, pMCMV (Table 2), and SL9 (data not shown) loaded H-2 Ld molecules range between 4.8-6.4 nM. These small, peptide-dependent, differences in affinity are reproducible and variations in affinity were accounted for in the competitive binding assays. These values are in good agreement with the previously measured affinities of 125I-30.5.7 Fab for the same peptide- H-2 Ld complexes (8.8-16 nM; reference 38).
|
2C TCR-Ig inhibited binding of 30.5.7 Fab to H-2 Ld
molecules loaded with either QL9 or p2Ca peptides, but
did not inhibit 30.5.7 Fab binding to pMCMV-loaded H-2
Ld molecules (Fig. 5). The affinity of soluble divalent 2C
TCR-Ig for QL9 loaded molecules is 13.3 nM (Fig. 5 and
Table 2). As expected, the affinity of 2C TCR-Ig for
p2Ca-loaded molecules, 90 nM, is lower than that for
QL9-loaded H-2 Ld. Although a small amount of competitive inhibition was seen with SL9 loaded cells, the affinity
of the soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig chimeras for SL9-loaded molecules is too low to be accurately measured under the conditions tested (data not shown).
In all cases analyzed, the affinity of the soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig was significantly higher than the affinity of the soluble monovalent 2C TCR for its cognate ligand (Fig. 5 and Table 2). The affinity of soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig was 50-fold higher for QL9-loaded H-2 Ld and at least 20-fold higher for p2Ca-loaded H-2 Ld molecules than that of soluble monovalent 2C TCR for the same peptide-MHC complexes (Table 2). Thus, the divalent nature of soluble 2C TCR-Ig chimeras significantly increased the affinity of the TCR analogue for its cognate ligands.
Binding of Soluble Divalent 2C TCR-Ig to Cognate Peptide- MHC Ligands.As discussed above, in addition to recognizing the alloreactive peptide-H-2 Ld ligands, additional cognate ligands for 2C TCR have been defined. The 2C TCR is also alloreactive on H-2 Kbm3. Both alloreactive MHC molecules, H-2 Ld and H-2 Kbm3, mediate negative selection of the 2C TCR in 2C transgenic mice. With regard to the alloresponse on H-2 Kbm3, a single peptide- MHC complex, dEV-8/H-2 Kbm3, has been defined (see Table 1 for sequences) and is known to be a target for 2C CTLs and the presumptive negatively selecting peptide- MHC complex. In addition to alloreactive complexes for 2C CTL, an artificially derived peptide-dependent syngeneic target has also been defined, SIY/H-2 Kb (see Table 1 for sequences). To analyze the ability of 2C TCR-Ig to bind to these alternate 2C-reactive complexes, the binding of 2C TCR-Ig to peptide-loaded transfected T2 cells was studied. Since T2 cells are derived from a human cell line, T2 cells do not naturally express H-2 Kb as do RMA-S cells. Thus, to study the binding of 2C TCR-Ig to peptide-loaded H-2 Kb or various H-2 Kbm mutant molecules, the T2 system was chosen since it is not complicated by the expression of MHC molecules from the parental cell line. Similar to RMA-S Ld cells, T2 cells also express empty MHC molecules that can be readily loaded with different peptides. For these studies, T2 cells transfected with: H-2 Kb, T2 Kb; H-2 Kbm3, T2 Kbm3; and H-2 Kbm11, T2 Kbm11 (21, 22) were loaded with a variety of different MHC-binding peptides.
Peptide SIY-loaded T2 Kb, T2 Kbm3, or T2 Kbm11 cells
all expressed epitopes recognized by 2C TCR-Ig (Fig. 6,
A-C). MCF of cells incubated with 2C TCR-Ig increased
~20-fold, from 14 for pVSV (H-2 Kb binding peptide isolated from vesicular stomatitis virus NP residues) -loaded to
276 for SIY-loaded T2 Kb and from 16 for pVSV-loaded to
250 for SIY-loaded T2 Kbm11. SIY-loaded T2 Kbm3 cells
showed a much weaker but still significant interaction with
2C TCR-Ig (Fig. 6 B); compare SIY-loaded (solid lines;
MCF of 36) to pVSV-loaded (dotted lines; MCF of 12) T2
Kbm3 cells. The 2C TCR-Ig-binding data to SIY-MHC
complexes was consistent with 2C CTL-mediated lysis on
various SIY-MHC targets (Fig. 7). 2C CTL-mediated efficient lysis of SIY-loaded T2 Kb and T2 Kbm11 cells (Fig. 7 B
and data not shown, 50% lethal dose (LD50) of ~10 ng/ml
for SIY T2 Kb). 2C CTL-mediated lysis of SIY-loaded T2
Kbm3 cells was significantly less efficient (Fig. 7 C, LD50
~100 ng/ml).
The binding of 2C TCR-Ig to dEV-8-loaded cells revealed a striking difference between the affinity of 2C TCR-Ig for dEV-8-MHC complexes and the ability of that same peptide-MHC complex to mediate lysis by 2C CTLs. As expected, dEV-8-loaded T2 Kb cells were neither lysed by 2C CTL (Fig. 7 B), nor were they recognized by 2C TCR-Ig in flow cytometry assays (Fig. 6 A). Unexpectedly, no significant binding of 2C TCR-Ig could be found to dEV-8-loaded T2 Kbm3 cells (Fig. 6 B). MCF of cells stained with 2C TCR-Ig was similar whether cells were loaded with dEV-8 or control peptide pVSV (Fig. 6 B; compare dotted lines to dashed lines). This is most surprising in that, consistent with previous reports (22), dEV-8- loaded T2 Kbm3 cells were efficiently lysed by 2C CTL (Fig. 7 C). In fact, dEV-8-loaded T2 Kbm3 cells were much better target cells (LD50 of ~0.5-1.0 ng/ml) than SIY-loaded T2 Kbm3 cells (LD50 of ~100 ng/ml), where a significant binding of 2C TCR-Ig was seen (Fig. 6 B). The efficiency of lysis by 2C CTL of dEV-8-loaded T2 Kbm3 cells was on the same order of magnitude as that of p2Ca-loaded T2 Ld cells (Fig. 7 A, LD50 of ~0.5 ng/ml) which was also efficiently recognized in the 2C TCR-Ig-binding assay (Fig. 2 G). These findings were not due to poor binding of dEV-8 to H-2 Kbm3 molecules since peptide-loading experiments showed that H-2 Kbm3 molecules were stabilized equally well by both SIY and dEV-8 peptides (data not shown). A similar, although less dramatic, lack of correlation between cytolysis and 2C TCR-Ig binding was seen for dEV-8-loaded T2 Kbm11 cells. dEV-8-loaded T2 Kbm11 cells are relatively poor targets for 2C CTL (reference 22 and data not shown), but were also not reactive with 2C TCR-Ig in flow cytometry assays (Fig. 6 C). Thus, a significant discrepancy exists between the affinity of the 2C TCR for a naturally occurring alloreactive peptide-MHC complex and the ability of that same complex to mediate lysis of target cells exists.
Analysis of the Effects ofThe specificity and
affinity of 2C TCR-Ig for peptide-MHC complexes suggested that one might be able to use this reagent to probe
the influence of lymphokines on endogenous, cell surface, peptide-MHC complexes. To analyze this possibility and
follow the expression of endogenous 2C-reactive peptide-
H-2 Ld complexes within a heterogeneous peptide-MHC
environment, the influence of -IFN on the H-2 Ld-expressing murine cell line RENCA was studied. RENCA cells
were cultured in the presence of variable amounts of
-IFN
to induce upregulation of naturally loaded peptide-MHC
complexes. 2C TCR-Ig binding to RENCA cells increased as a function of
-IFN induction (Fig. 8, A-D, solid
lines). The effect of
-IFN was dose dependent with a
maximal two- to threefold increase seen on cells treated with 10 U/ml of
-IFN. Since
-IFN is known to have a
direct effect on class I expression (Fig. 8, E-H and reference 23), it is necessary to normalize for any nonspecific
2C TCR-Ig binding secondary to increased expression of
H-2 Ld. This was accomplished by incubating RENCA
cells with a control irrelevant H-2 Ld-binding peptide from
pp89 of murine cytomegalovirus, pMCMV. Since p2Ca is
known to have a weak affinity for H-2 Ld (14, 15) exchange with a higher affinity H-2 Ld-binding peptide like
pMCMV (14) should be very efficient. Therefore, background reactivity of 2C TCR-Ig could be determined by
the efficient displacement of endogenous p2Ca or p2Ca-like peptides by incubating the cells with saturating amounts
of the control pMCMV peptide. In all cases, 2C TCR-Ig
binding could be blocked by earlier incubation of cells with
the control H-2 Ld-binding pMCMV (Fig. 8, A-D, dotted
lines). Earlier incubation of RENCA cells with a 2C-specific peptide, QL9, induced a dramatic increase in 2C
TCR-Ig binding (data not shown). The results of these experiments indicate that 2C TCR-Ig could be used to analyze the impact of cytokines on cell surface expression of
endogenous 2C-reactive peptide-MHC complexes.
The effect of -IFN on 2C TCR-Ig reactivity was distinct from its effects on 30.5.7 reactivity. At all concentrations analyzed, 5-50 U/ml,
-IFN induced a five to sixfold
increase in serologically reactive H-2 Ld, as recognized by
mAb 30.5.7 (Fig. 8, E-H). MCF of unstimulated RENCA
cells was 500, whereas the MCF of
-IFN-stimulated cells was between 2,666 and 3,038. The maximal effect of
-IFN
was seen at the lowest dose used, in the experiment presented, 5 U/ml, and in other experiments was seen even at
dose of
-IFN as low as 1 U/ml (data not shown). Interestingly, the dose response curve of
-IFN on 2C TCR-Ig
reactivity was shifted.
-IFN at 5 U/ml had a relatively
small, but significant effect on 2C TCR-Ig reactivity. Maximal effects of
-IFN on 2C TCR-Ig reactivity required
-IFN treatment at 10 U/ml, ~10-fold more than
needed for maximal effects of
-IFN on 30.5.7 reactivity.
These results indicate a differential effect of
-IFN on
MHC heavy chain expression than that of
-IFN on specific peptide antigen-MHC complex expression.
Interest in understanding T cell-mediated immune responses led us to develop a general system for expression of high affinity soluble analogues of TCR. This was accomplished using Ig as a molecular scaffold to generate soluble divalent TCR analogues. The proof of the efficacy of this approach was shown by the development of two different TCR-Ig molecules, one derived from a TCR recognizing a murine alloantigen, and the other from a TCR recognizing a viral peptide presented by human HLA-A2. The divalent nature of soluble TCR-Ig increased the affinity ~50-fold, as proven by measuring the values of both the monovalent and divalent 2C TCR in a single system. The divalent construct had an affinity for QL9-loaded H-2 Ld molecules ~50-fold higher than soluble monovalent 2C TCR. Divalent 2C TCR-Ig also had an affinity for p2Ca-loaded H-2 Ld molecules at least 20-fold higher than soluble monovalent 2C TCRs. Although 2C TCR-Ig interacted with SL9-H-2 Ld complexes, its affinity was too low to accurately estimate under the conditions tested, yet it was significantly higher than that of soluble monovalent 2C TCR. Thus, for all ligands analyzed, significant increases in affinity of the soluble divalent 2C TCR-Ig over soluble monovalent versions of 2C TCR were found. This increase in affinity enhanced our ability to use this reagent to study peptide-MHC interactions.
Soluble divalent TCR-Ig used in flow cytometry assays proved to be a sensitive way of analyzing TCR interaction with peptide-MHC complexes. In our model system, mean channel fluorescence of peptide-loaded RMA-S Ld cells was concordant with the reported affinities of 2C TCR for various peptide-MHC ligands. Using this relatively simple assay we were able to detect interactions of the 2C TCR with three different peptide-H-2 Ld complexes. These peptide-MHC complexes reflect an affinity range of over three orders of magnitude, from 0.066 to 71 µM for monovalent 2C TCR (14). This range of affinities is thought to reflect most of the range of known class I-specific TCR interactions with either peptide agonists-MHC or peptide antagonist-MHC complexes (49). Although soluble monovalent 2C TCR was useful in the direct flow cytometry assay only with the highest affinity QL9/H-2 Ld MHC complexes (data not shown), no reactivity could be seen between the soluble monovalent 2C TCR and one of the natural ligands, p2Ca, or the low affinity peptide, SL9 (data not shown). We were unable to detect the very weak interactions occurring between 2C TCR and p2Ca/H-2 Kb molecules (data not shown and reference 14). The affinity of this interaction has been measured as 333 µM (14) suggesting a lower limit of detection of peptide-MHC complexes using soluble 2C TCR-Ig in a flow cytometry based assay.
The affinities measured for soluble monovalent 2C TCR in our system are about an order of magnitude different than previously measured affinities for soluble monovalent 2C TCR (12, 14, 15). Using a competitive 1B2 binding assay, investigators estimated an affinity of 66 nM for the interaction of 2C TCR with QL9-loaded H-2 Ld molecules and 500 nM for its interaction with p2Ca-loaded H-2 Ld molecules (14). Differences in assay systems, including involvement of the CD8 coreceptor probably account for the order of magnitude weaker affinity we measured for soluble monovalent 2C TCR. Recent work supporting this view has shown that CD8 enhances the affinity of TCR for certain peptide-MHC complexes ~10-fold (53, 54).
Using 2C TCR-Ig, an unexpected finding was revealed in analysis of the affinity of 2C TCR binding for cognate peptide-MHC complexes. Binding of 2C TCR-Ig to peptide-loaded syngeneic MHC complexes displayed a strict correlation with the CTL data. 2C TCR-Ig binding to dEV-8-H-2 Kb was undetectable, whereas binding to SIY- H-2 Kb was quite strong. Surprisingly, binding of 2C TCR-Ig did not correlate with efficacy of lysis for the allogeneic MHC, H-2 Kbm3. No binding of 2C TCR-Ig could be detected to the naturally occurring allogeneic peptide dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3 complex. The lack of 2C TCR-Ig binding occurred despite the fact that dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3 is more efficient in mediating lysis by 2C CTL than SIY-H-2 Kb and that 2C TCR-Ig binding to SIY-H-2 Kbm3 could easily be detected. Our experiments using 2C TCR-Ig demonstrate that the affinity of the 2C TCR for the dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3 complex is weaker than 71 µM. This is based on the fact that although 2C TCR-Ig recognized SL9-H-2 Ld complexes (Fig. 3), an interaction known to have an affinity of 71 µM (14), 2C TCR-Ig did not recognize dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3. Therefore, the affinity of 2C TCR for dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3 must be weaker than 71 µM. This is particularly important in view of the fact that allogeneic MHC targets are thought to be relatively high affinity ligands, affinities of 1-0.1 µM for cognate TCR interactions (14, 15). Since in normal allogeneic responses, the T cell repertoire has not been negatively selected, some investigators have proposed that the TCR interaction with allogeneic MHC will routinely be of higher affinity than TCR interactions with peptide-MHC complexes that have passed through negative selection (15). Based on the previously estimated affinities of negatively selecting peptide-MHC complexes, one would have expected that the 2C TCR would not be negatively selected on H-2 Kbm3. However, in transgenic 2C TCR animals, the allogeneic H-2 Kbm3 MHC molecule serves as a mediator of negative selection in the thymus (20). Thus, assuming dEV8-H-2 Kbm3 is a negatively selecting complex, the intrinsic affinity of peptide-MHC complexes required to mediate negative selection is significantly lower than previously predicted.
Previously, a lack of a correlation between TCR affinity and efficiency of lysis by CTLs was noted with certain variant p2Ca peptides, not naturally occurring endogenous peptides, on H-2 Ld (16). From that work, investigators concluded that other factors such as CD8, which are not part of soluble TCR analogues, could be influencing the affinity of the TCR for its peptide-MHC ligand, thereby, impacting on the lysis of targets pulsed with these peptides. As mentioned above, this hypothesis is supported by recent work showing the enhancement of the interaction between TCR and peptide-MHC complexes by CD8 (54). Our analysis of the 2C TCR-Ig reactivity, which was unable to detect certain 2C-reactive complexes, dEV-8-H-2 Kbm3 complexes, may also reflect a differential importance of CD8 engagement in facilitating lysis of certain peptide- MHC targets over others.
By analyzing the expression of endogenous cell surface
peptide-MHC complexes, we found that the effect of -IFN
on regulation of class I heavy chain is distinct from its effect
on regulation of the peptide-MHC complexes. This could
reflect different target genes for the two activities of
-IFN.
Presumably the effects of
-IFN on class I heavy chain expression is due the
-IFN-responsive element in the class I
MHC promoter. The effects on expression of the epitope
recognized by 2C TCR-Ig could be due to the effects of
-IFN on peptide processing, as recently found to relate to induction of the proteosome component PA28 (24, 25,
28), or at other potentially more complex
-IFN-controlled pathways involved in regulation of antigenic peptide
delivery. Of interest when the effect of the proteasome
regulator PA28
on antigen presentation was studied using
cells transfected with PA28
, investigators saw an approximate threefold increase in alloreactive C57BL/6 anti-BALB/c responses. This effect is similar in magnitude to the effect of
-IFN on 2C TCR-Ig binding.
In addition to using soluble divalent high affinity TCR
as a general approach to study expression of peptide-MHC
complexes, mAbs that differentiate between MHC molecules on the basis of peptides resident in the groove are also
useful in studying expression of specific peptide-MHC
complexes. As previously discussed, using both conventional approaches and a recombinant antibody phage display library, a few such antibodies have been produced (3- 8). The mAb made using a recombinant antibody phage
display library (8) has affinities generally comparable to the
affinity of the soluble 2C TCR-Ig for high affinity peptide-MHC ligands. A distinct advantage of soluble high affinity TCR-Ig chimeras is that even in the absence of any a
priori knowledge about their ligands, they may be useful in
defining the specific ligands recognized by poorly defined
TCR such as /
TCR, undefined tumor-specific T cells,
and T cells involved in autoimmune responses. The generation of mAbs specific for a particular peptide-MHC complex requires the prior identification of the peptide ligand
for development and obviously cannot be used to help define the TCR ligands or the peptide-MHC complex. Furthermore, T cell activation requires cross-linking of multiple TCRs. Since the mode of interaction of TCR-Ig
chimeras with peptide-MHC complexes is similar to that of the natural TCR, TCR-Ig will mimic the interaction of
a T cell with APCs and may help facilitate elucidation of biochemical interactions involved in TCR recognition of peptide-MHC complexes. Although mAbs with high affinity
for specific peptide-MHC complexes will cross-link TCR,
there is no guarantee that they will mimic the interaction
of TCR with peptide-MHC ligands. Thus, one can expect that use of high affinity biologically relevant cognates such as TCR-Ig molecules is likely to reveal details of TCR interactions with peptide-MHC molecules that peptide-specific mAbs may miss. Advantages offered by both systems
will facilitate the analysis of expression of specific peptide-
MHC complexes in both normal and aberrant immune responses.
Here we presented a general approach for producing soluble divalent versions of heterodimeric proteins such as T cell receptors. This is the first time that soluble high affinity and specificity analogues of TCR proteins have been made. This approach is not only of relevance for TCR, but also for other immunoregulatory proteins such as class II MHC molecules (O'Herrin, S.M., M.S. Lebowitz, and J.P. Schneck, manuscript in preparation), and potentially useful in other cell biological systems involving heterodimeric integral membrane proteins. The experimental system described here outlines a general approach of using divalent high affinity ligands to study cell-cell interactions, driven by multivalent ligand-receptor interactions.
Received for publication 7 April 1997 and in revised form 11 July 1997.
RMA-S, RMA-S Ld, T2, T2 Ld were gifts from Ted Hansen (Washington University, St. Louis, MO), T2 Kb was a gift from P. Cresswell (Yale University, New Haven, CT), and T2 Kbm3 and T2 Kbm11 were gifts from L. Pease (Mayo Foundation, Rochester, MN). cDNA encoding the murine IgG1 arsonate-specific heavy chain, 93G7, and kappa light chain, 91A3, were gifts from D. Capra and C. Haseman (Southwestern University, Dallas, TX). The modified pAcUW51 expression vector used was a gift from John Kappler (University of Colorado Health Science Center, Denver, CO). 2C TCR transgenic mice were obtained from Ted Hansen (Washington University, St. Louis, MO) with the consent of Dennis Loh. We also thank Drs. M. Edidin, H. Levitsky, D. Pardoll, S. Sadegh-Nasseri, J. Slansky, and R. Silicano for their critical reviews of the manuscript.This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, American Cancer Society, and National Multiple Sclerosis Society. J. Schneck holds a Harry Weaver Neuroscience Scholars' Award from the National Multiple Sclerosis Foundation.
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