Abstract
AbstractThe immune synapse is the tight contact zone between a lymphocyte and a cell presenting its cognate antigen. This structure serves as a signaling platform and entails a polarization of intra-cellular components, necessary to the immunological function of the cell. While the surface properties of the presenting cell are known to control the formation of the synapse, their impact on polarization has not yet been studied.Using functional lipid droplets as tunable artificial presenting cells combined with a microfluidic pairing device, we simultaneously observe synchronized synapses and dynamically quantify polarization patterns of individual B cells. By assessing how the ligand concentration, the surface fluidity and the substrate rigidity impact this polarization, we show that its onset depends on the antigen concentration at the synapse, and that the substrate rigidity controls both its onset and its kinetics. Our experimental system enables a fine phenotyping of monoclonal cell populations based on their synaptic readout.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory