Author:
Yuan Linjie,Ma Xianqiang,Yang Yunyun,Li Xin,Ma Weiwei,Yang Haoyu,Huang Jian-Wen,Xue Jing,Yi Simin,Zhang Mengting,Cai Ningning,Ding Qingyang,Li Liping,Duan Jianxin,Malwal Satish,Chen Chun-Chi,Oldfield Eric,Guo Rey-Ting,Zhang Yonghui
Abstract
AbstractTumor cells and pathogen-infected cells are presented to human γδ T cells based on “inside-out” signaling in which metabolites called phosphoantigens (pAgs) inside target cells are recognized by the intracellular domain of a butyrophilin protein (BTN3A1), leading to an extracellular conformational change. Here, we report that pAgs function as molecular “glues” that initiate a heteromeric association between the intracellular domains of BTN3A1 and the structurally similar BTN2A1. Working with both exogenous and endogenous pAgs, we used x-ray crystallography, mutational studies, cellular assays, synthetic probe as well as molecular dynamics investigations to determine how pAgs glue intracellular BTN3A1 and BTN2A1 together for the “inside-out” signaling that triggers γδ T cell activation. This γδ T cell-specific mode of antigen sensing creates opportunities for the development of alternative immunotherapies against cancer and infectious diseases that do not involve αβ T cells.One Sentence SummaryThe responses of gamma-delta T cells to cancer cells or pathogens are initiated via the intracellular association of heteromeric butyrophilins that are glued together by isoprenoid metabolites.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory