Optogenetic control shows that kinetic proofreading regulates the activity of the T cell receptor

  1. O Sascha Yousefi
  2. Matthias Günther
  3. Maximilian Hörner
  4. Julia Chalupsky
  5. Maximilian Wess
  6. Simon M Brandl
  7. Robert W Smith
  8. Christian Fleck
  9. Tim Kunkel
  10. Matias D Zurbriggen
  11. Thomas Höfer
  12. Wilfried Weber
  13. Wolfgang WA Schamel  Is a corresponding author
  1. University of Freiburg, Germany
  2. German Cancer Research Center, Germany
  3. University of Heidelberg, Germany
  4. Wageningen University and Research, Netherlands
  5. University of Düsseldorf, Germany

Abstract

The immune system distinguishes between self and foreign antigens. The kinetic proofreading (KPR) model proposes that T cells discriminate self from foreign ligands by the different ligand binding half-lives to the T cell receptor (TCR). It is challenging to test KPR as the available experimental systems fall short of only altering the binding half-lives and keeping other parameters of the interaction unchanged. We engineered an optogenetic system using the plant photoreceptor phytochrome B (PhyB) as a ligand to selectively control the dynamics of ligand binding to the TCR by light. This opto-ligand-TCR system was combined with the unique property of PhyB to continuously cycle between the binding and non-binding states under red light, with the light intensity determining the cycling rate and thus the binding duration. Mathematical modeling of our experimental datasets showed that indeed the ligand-TCR interaction half-life is the decisive factor for activating downstream TCR signaling, substantiating KPR.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.001

Introduction

The function of T cells is to mount an immune response to foreign ligands, such as derived from bacteria or viruses, but not to respond to self ligands stemming from the body’s own cells. These ligands are composed of a foreign peptide presented by major histocompatibility complexes molecules (pMHC) on the own cells. Activation of a T cell is initiated when foreign pMHC bind to the T cell receptor (TCR) on the T cell surface. The pMHC-TCR binding event stimulates intracellular signaling pathways, such as calcium influx into the cytosol, leading to the functional responses of the T cell (Courtney et al., 2018). Self peptides on MHC (self pMHCs) also bind to the TCR and are important for the development and survival of naïve T cells, but do not trigger an immune response as seen for foreign peptides on MHC (Davis et al., 1998). This discrimination between foreign and self pMHC correlates with the affinity of the ligand-TCR interaction, in that foreign, stimulatory pMHCs bind with higher affinity to the TCR than non-stimulatory pMHC (Davis et al., 1998; Sykulev et al., 1994). However, how the affinity of a ligand is determined by the cell to generate a T cell response or not remains enigmatic (Chakraborty and Weiss, 2014). Note that in case of pMHC binding to T cells other processes than the pure pMHC-TCR interaction are involved, such as interactions with the co-receptors CD8 or CD4; thus, the terms ‘apparent affinity’ or ‘potency’ might be more suitable when describing these complex binding events.

One model is kinetic proofreading (KPR), which originally described the specificity by which the genetic code is read in protein synthesis (Hopfield, 1974) and inspired a similar theoretical model for ligand discrimination in T cells (McKeithan, 1995). In KPR the T cell does not simply measure the amount of ligand-bound TCRs (called occupancy model), but monitors the dynamics of the binding events. These dynamics can be described by the on-rate and the half-life of the interaction. The KPR model proposes that a long half-life of the ligand-TCR interaction, such as seen for high affinity pMHC, allows a series of biochemical reactions to be completed that eventually trigger downstream signaling. By contrast, a low affinity ligand detaches before an activatory signal is produced and the TCR then reverts quickly to the initial inactive state, thus not initiating T cell activation. Although the half-life is the decisive factor, it was recently shown that the on-rate also plays a role (Aleksic et al., 2010; Govern et al., 2010; Lin et al., 2019). If the on-rate is very fast a ligand that has detached can rapidly rebind to the same TCR before the first biochemical reactions are reverted. Again, the duration of the binding event, in this case interrupted by short dissociations, is the relevant parameter.

The KPR model has also been extended to include feedback and feed-forward loops in the signaling network below the TCR (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Chakraborty and Weiss, 2014; Dushek et al., 2011; Lever et al., 2016; Rabinowitz et al., 1996). Inclusion of these signaling network loops improved the mathematical description of the observed sharp ligand discrimination threshold, when relating ligand half-life to T cell activation. At the same time, the high sensitivity of the T cells towards low numbers of ligands (1–10 molecules) was retained (Irvine et al., 2002; Purbhoo et al., 2004).

To get experimental insight into the mechanism of ligand discrimination by T cells, pMHC or TCRs have been mutated at the binding sites to generate ligand-TCR pairs of different affinities and half-lives (Aleksic et al., 2010; Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Daniels et al., 2006; Davis and van der Merwe, 2006; Dushek et al., 2011; Govern et al., 2010; Holler and Kranz, 2003; Kalergis et al., 2001; Kersh et al., 1998; Krogsgaard et al., 2003; Lever et al., 2016). Although such studies are broadly consistent with KPR, other biophysical parameters, such as the free binding energy, geometry of the interaction (Adams et al., 2011), conformational changes at the TCR (Dopfer et al., 2014; Gil et al., 2002; Risueño et al., 2006) and the ability to withstand pulling (Kim et al., 2009; Liu et al., 2014), might also have been changed along with the affinity, and therefore alternative models of ligand discrimination cannot be ruled out. Unfortunately, no method to specifically modulate only the dynamics of ligand-receptor interactions is currently available. Thus, in order to disentangle the half-life from these other parameters, we engineered an optogenetic system in which the duration of ligand binding to the TCR can be remotely controlled in a reversible manner (ON-OFF switch), called the opto-ligand-TCR system.

Our opto-ligand-TCR approach harnesses the PhyB-PIF (phytochrome B-PhyB interacting factor) protein pair from Arabidopsis thaliana (Bae and Choi, 2008; Levskaya et al., 2009; Toettcher et al., 2013). In this pair, the photoreceptor PhyB is the light-responsive element, due to its chromophore phycocyanobilin, which undergoes a conformational cis-trans isomerization when absorbing photons of the appropriate wavelength. Upon illumination with 660 nm light, PhyB switches to its ON state in which it interacts with PIF6 with a nanomolar affinity (Levskaya et al., 2009). With 740 nm light, PhyB undergoes a conformational transition to the OFF state preventing binding to PIF6. This light-dependent protein-protein interaction was utilized in several optogenetic applications (Kolar et al., 2018), such as the control of protein or organelle localization (Adrian et al., 2017; Beyer et al., 2018; Levskaya et al., 2009), intracellular signaling (Toettcher et al., 2013), nuclear transport of proteins (Beyer et al., 2015), cell adhesion (Baaske et al., 2019; Yüz et al., 2018) or gene expression (Müller et al., 2013a). Using high intensity light, the PhyB-PIF interaction can be switched ON and OFF within seconds (Levskaya et al., 2009; Mancinelli, 1994; Smith et al., 2016). Importantly for our study, at continuous 660 nm illumination the individual PhyB molecules constantly switch between the ON and OFF states, again in the order of seconds, thus being within the range of the estimated KPR times (Mancinelli, 1994; Smith et al., 2016).

We and others have previously fused binding domains to the ectodomain of the TCRβ subunit; either a single chain Fv fragment (Minguet et al., 2007) or a single strand DNA oligonucleotide (Taylor et al., 2017). Indeed, the chimeric TCRs were expressed on the cell surface and were activated via the appended binding domains. Importantly, ligand discrimination also occurred when using the DNA-TCR; i.e., a low affinity binder to the DNA did not evoke TCR stimulation and a high affinity binder did (Taylor et al., 2017). This clearly showed that ligands do not need to bind to the canonical pMHC binding site within the TCR and that co-receptors are not required for ligand discrimination. It should be noted that the developmental state of the T cell can modulate the discrimination process as do the co-receptors (CD8 or CD4) or the expression levels of intracellular signaling molecules (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Davey et al., 1998; Lucas et al., 1999; Madrenas et al., 1997; Stepanek et al., 2014).

Here we fused the first 100 amino acids of PIF6 together with GFP to the ectodomain of TCRβ and used the first 651 amino acids of PhyB in a tetramerized form as the ligand (Figure 1). Using continuous 660 nm light of different intensities to modulate the dynamics of PhyB tetramer binding to the TCR and calcium influx as a readout we find that there is an intensity threshold: at lower intensities and longer ligand-TCR half-lives the T cell is activated and at higher intensities and shorter half-lives the cell is not activated. Using a mathematical model of KPR we show that the threshold half-life in our opto-ligand-TCR system is 8 s.

Engineering a light-controlled switch for the ligand-TCR interaction: the opto-ligand-TCR system.

Light of 660 nm and 740 nm wavelength reversibly switches PhyB between the OFF and ON states. In the ON state PhyB tetramers (PhyBt) bind to and cluster GFP-PIFS-TCRs leading to signaling and the activation of the T cell. The red dot indicates the fluorophore-coupled streptavidin tetramer.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.002

Results

The first aim of our study was to establish an optogenetic system in which ligand binding to the TCR can be reversibly controlled by light (Figure 1).

Engineering of the opto-ligand-TCR system: the ligand

The light-responsive N-terminal 651 amino acids of A. thaliana PhyB (PhyB1-651) have been used as an optogenetic tool (Adrian et al., 2017; Baaske et al., 2019; Beyer et al., 2015; Beyer et al., 2018; Johnson and Toettcher, 2018; Levskaya et al., 2009; Müller et al., 2013b; Toettcher et al., 2013) and the photobiology of this fragment has been described previously (Smith et al., 2016). Here we used this PhyB form as a ligand. PhyB1-651 fused to the biotinylation site Avitag (Beckett et al., 1999) and a His6-tag (Figure 2A) was produced in E. coli. Additionally, the bacteria were engineered to produce the cyanobacterial version of the phytochrome chromophore, phycocyanobilin (Essen et al., 2008; Smith et al., 2016). PhyB1-651-Avitag-His6, called PhyB in the remainder of this article, was isolated by Ni2+-affinity chromatography (Smith et al., 2016). We then tested the functionality of PhyB through its light-dependent interaction with PIF6. To this aim, we produced the first 100 amino acids of A. thaliana PIF6 (PIF61-100), which were shown to be sufficient for photoreversible PhyB binding with nanomolar affinity (Tischer and Weiner, 2014), as a fusion protein with the maltose-binding protein and a His6-tag [MBP-PIF61-100-His6, from now on called MBP-PIF(wt)]. After illuminating a mixture of PhyB and an excess MBP-PIF(wt) with saturating 660 nm light, 70% of the PhyB molecules were complexed with PIF as depicted by a shift in elution from a size exclusion chromatography column (Figure 2B). This was not the case when the proteins were exposed to 740 nm light. Since at photoequilibrium under 660 nm light only 80% of the PhyB molecules are in the ON state (Bae and Choi, 2008; Smith et al., 2016), we conclude that the majority of PhyB molecules were functionally active.

Production of PhyB tetramers.

(A) Schematics of the PhyB1-651 construct and the PhyB tetramers. PCB = phycocyanobilin. (B) Purified PhyB was illuminated with 660 nm light [PhyB(660)] and added in a 1:2 molar ratio to MBP-PIF(wt). The proteins were separated by gel filtration and PhyB was detected by its absorbance at the isosbestic point of 671 nm. PhyB molecules around 14.5 ml elution volume are the free PhyB molecules and the ones around 12.5 ml are the PhyB-MBP-PIF complexes. As controls, PhyB illuminated with 740 nm light [PhyB(740)] plus MBP-PIF(wt) and PhyB alone was only detected at 14.5 ml elution volume. Results show one experiment of n > 3. (C) Affinity chromatography-purified PhyB was mixed in a 10:1 molar ratio with streptavidin-DyLight650, incubated for 2 hr at room temperature and the formed PhyB tetramers (PhyBt) were isolated from monomers using size-exclusion chromatography. The elution of PhyB was monitored via its absorbance at 365 nm. Results show one experiment of n > 3.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.003

Although soluble TCR ligands are active as dimers (Boniface et al., 1998; Cochran et al., 2000; Minguet and Schamel, 2008; Minguet et al., 2007), tetrameric pMHC based on streptavidin are routinely used to stimulate the TCR (Altman et al., 1996) and to obtain insight into ligand discrimination by T cells (Stone et al., 2011; Stone et al., 2001). Thus, we wanted to construct PhyB tetramers (PhyBt) to be used as ligands in our system (Figure 1). To this end, biotinylated PhyB was tetramerized using fluorophore-coupled streptavidin. After separating the tetramers from monomers by size exclusion chromatography (Figure 2C), we obtained purified PhyBt that we used in this work.

Engineering of the opto-ligand-TCR system: the TCR

Next, we engineered a PIF-fused TCR that can bind to and be activated by PhyBt when the PhyB molecules are in the ON (but not in the OFF) state (Figure 1). In plants PIF6 is produced in the cytoplasm, whereas in our system PIF6 is produced in the oxidative environment of the endoplasmic reticulum. Therefore, we mutated cysteines and N-linked glycosylation sites (Asn-X-Ser/Thr) in PIF6. We produced a panel of five different PIF61-100 mutants abolishing cysteines 9 and 10 as well as asparagine 35 or serine 37 as MBP fusion proteins (Figure 3—figure supplement 1A,B). We analyzed the interaction of PhyB with these PIF61-100 mutants under limiting amounts of MBP-PIF using size exclusion chromatography (Figure 3—figure supplement 1C,D). All mutants formed complexes with PhyB pre-illuminated with 660 nm light [PhyB(660)] similar to MBP-PIF(wt).

Having seen that all PIF61-100 mutants interacted well with PhyB, they were fused - preceded by a signal peptide - to the N-terminus of the human HA1.7 TCRβ chain that contains a Vβ3 variable region (Hennecke et al., 2000; Hewitt et al., 1992) (Figure 3A). We analyzed the presence of the different PIF61-100-TCRβ constructs on the cell surface following lentiviral transduction of Jurkat T cells (Abraham and Weiss, 2004). PIF61-100 C9S C10S S37A [PIF(SSA)] showed the highest surface presence (Figure 3B), indicating that it assembled to a complete TCR complex (Alarcón et al., 2003; Call and Wucherpfennig, 2005). Hence, PIF(SSA) was therefore used for all future optimizations and termed secretory PIF or PIFS (Figure 3C). Surprisingly, despite the good interaction of MBP-PIFS with PhyB in size-exclusion chromatography (Figure 3—figure supplement 1C,D), no binding of PhyBt to the PIFS-TCR on the surface of Jurkat cells could be detected (Figure 3D). GFP-PIFS-TCR cells (described below) served as a positive control for binding (Figures 3D and 4F panels are from the same experiment). Furthermore, PIFS-TCR Jurkat cells could be stimulated to flux calcium via cross-linking of the PIFS-TCR using an anti-Vβ3 antibody, but not using PhyBt pre-illuminated with 660 nm light, called PhyBt(660) (Figure 3E). Consequently, although PIFS-TCRβ is present at the cell surface and PIFS itself binds to PhyB (in the form of MBP-PIF), PIFS loses its binding capacity towards PhyB when it is fused to the TCR and exposed on the T cell’s surface.

Figure 3 with 1 supplement see all
Selection of PIFS that can be expressed together with the TCR.

(A) Schematics of the PIF-TCRβ constructs, including wild-type and mutant PIF. SP depicts the signal peptide and the arrow the signal peptidase cleavage site. The schematic constructs are drawn to scale with the scale bar indicated. (B) The presence of the different PIF-TCRs and a single chain variable fragment (scFv)-TCR on the cell surface was measured in lentivirally transduced Jurkat cells together with the parental cell line using an anti-Vβ3 antibody (Jovi3) via flow cytometry. The median fluorescence intensity (MFI) averaged for three experiments ± SEM is depicted. (C) Scheme of PIFS-TCRβ as integrated into the TCR. (D) 100 nM phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled PhyBt pre-illuminated with 660 nm or 740 nm light were incubated with Jurkat, PIFS-TCR Jurkat and GFP-PIFS-TCR cells and binding detected by flow cytometry. Numbers depict the % of cells in the respective quadrant. Results show one experiment of n = 3. (E) PIFS-TCR cells were labeled with Indo-1 and calcium influx measured by flow cytometry. 100 nM PhyBt(660) (orange) or 1 µg/ml anti-Vβ3 antibody (blue) were added as stimuli. Their addition is marked by an arrow and the illumination procedure by a bar above the graph (grey = dark). Results show one experiment of n > 3.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.004
Engineering of the GFP-PIFS-TCR.

(A) Schematics of the GFP-PIFS-TCRβ constructs, including three different furin cleavage sites (F1, F2, F3) or omitting any cleavage site (noF). SP depicts the signal peptide, the arrow the signal peptidase cleavage site and moxGFP the monomeric GFP optimized for an oxidative environment. (B) The surface expression of the different GFP-PIFS-TCRs and PIFS-TCR was measured in transduced Jurkat cells together with the parental cell line using an anti-Vβ3 antibody (Jovi3) via flow cytometry. (C) Analogous to (B), the amount of GFP was quantified on the surface of the different transductants using a polyclonal anti-GFP antibody via flow cytometry. (B) and (C) depict the median fluorescence intensity (MFI) averaged for three measurements ± SEM. (D) Scheme of GFP-PIFS-TCRβ as integrated into the TCR. (E) 100 nM phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled PhyBt pre-illuminated with 660 nm or 740 nm light were incubated with the cells indicated and binding was detected by flow cytometry. One experiment out of three is depicted displaying the average of quadruplicates ± SEM. (F) Together with Figure 3D these are the GFP vs PhyBt plots of the experiment quantified in (E).

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.006

A major difference between the functional MBP-PIFS and the dysfunctional PIFS-TCRβ construct is the C- and N-terminal localization of PIFS, respectively. Thus, adding an unrelated protein to the N-terminus of PIFS might rescue the PhyB-binding ability of the PIFS-TCR. To test this possibility, we attached a monomeric green fluorescent protein optimized for the oxidative environment of the endoplasmic reticulum (moxGFP, (Costantini et al., 2015)) to the N-terminus of PIFS-TCRβ. We distinguished the effect of a permanently attached moxGFP or a moxGFP that is only present during folding of PIFS in the endoplasmic reticulum. To this end, we added different furin protease recognition sequences (F1-F3) or a flexible linker without protease cleavage site (noF) between moxGFP and PIFS (Figure 4A). The protease furin is expressed in the Golgi and would cleave off the moxGFP as the engineered TCRs are exported to the cell surface. All constructs were well expressed on Jurkat cells (Figure 4B) and showed the expected absence or presence of moxGFP on the cell surface (Figure 4C). The construct using a truncated furin site (F3) had intermediate surface moxGFP levels, indicating that moxGFP is inefficiently cleaved. PhyBt(660) hardly bound to the surface of Jurkat cells expressing GFP-F1-PIFS-TCR or GFP-F2-PIFS-TCR with efficiently cleaved moxGFP (Figure 4E,F). However, fusing moxGFP permanently to PIFS-TCRβ resulted in strong light-dependent binding of PhyBt to the cell surface. In line with this, GFP-F3-PIFS-TCR with partly cleaved GFP bound intermediate amounts of PhyBt(660). These data suggest that moxGFP has to be present at the GFP-PIFS-TCR on the cell surface, in order for PIFS to bind to PhyBt(660). The optimized construct, moxGFP-noF-PIFS-TCR, will be called GFP-PIFS-TCR in the remainder of this article.

In conclusion, through several steps of engineering and optimization we generated the opto-ligand-TCR interaction system (Figure 1) based on the red/far-red light-regulated PhyB-PIF pair.

The GFP-PIFS-TCR is switched ON with 660 nm and OFF with 740 nm light

PhyBt(660) bound to cells expressing the GFP-PIFS-TCR, whereas PhyBt pre-illuminated with 740 nm light [PhyBt(740)] did not (Figure 4E,F). Binding induced TCR signaling, since addition of PhyBt(660), but not PhyBt(740), resulted in a strong calcium influx into the cells similar to a stimulation using an anti-TCR antibody (Figure 5A,B). The experiment was done in the dark, since in the absence of any light, the PhyB molecules rest in their state (ON or OFF) for time scales exceeding the duration of the calcium experiments (Smith et al., 2017; Smith et al., 2016). 660 nm light alone in the absence of PhyBt or GFP-PIFS-TCR did not evoke signaling; similarly Jurkat cells not expressing the GFP-PIFS-TCR could not be stimulated with PhyBt(660) (Figure 5—figure supplement 1A,B). Both experiments show that the light acted through inducing PhyBt binding to GFP-PIFS-TCR. Furthermore, as seen with soluble pMHC ligands (Boniface et al., 1998; Cochran et al., 2000; Minguet et al., 2007), PhyB monomers (in contrast to tetramers) could not stimulate calcium influx (Figure 5—figure supplement 1C). Lastly, stimulation with bead-coupled PhyBt(660) in the dark resulted in up-regulation of the activation marker CD69 (Figure 5C). Together these data show that light-mediated PhyBt-binding to GFP-PIFS-TCR induced TCR signaling and T cell activation.

Figure 5 with 1 supplement see all
The opto-ligand-TCR can be switched ON and OFF.

(A) GFP-PIFS-TCR cells were labeled with Indo-1 and calcium influx measured by flow cytometry. The arrow marks the addition of the stimuli indicated, and the grey rectangle the absence of any light. Results show one experiment of n > 3. (B) Calcium influx into GFP-PIFS-TCR cells stimulated with anti-Vβ3, PhyBt(660), PhyBt(740) or PBS was measured as in (A). Results show one experiment of n > 3. (C) GFP-PIFS-TCR Jurkat cells were incubated with PhyBt bound to sepharose beads after a 30 s 660 nm or 740 nm light pulse for 6 hr. Expression of CD69 was quantified by flow cytometry using an APC-labeled anti-CD69 antibody. Data points depict two experiments. (D) Calcium influx was measured as in (A). PhyBt(660) induced calcium influx (blue and orange lines). After 2 min a 1 s short pulse of 100% intensity 740 nm light (red break in the grey bar) terminated the calcium response (blue line). Addition of PhyBt(740) did not induce calcium influx (red line). Results show one experiment of n > 3.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.007

The PhyB-PIF system allows the rapid switching between the ON and OFF states in both directions. When we switched PhyBt from the ON to the OFF state by a 1 s pulse of 740 nm light, we stopped the ongoing calcium response initially evoked by PhyBt(660) (Figure 5D), demonstrating that our system is reversible.

The intensity of continuous 660 nm light determines GFP-PIFS-TCR activation

Having established the opto-ligand-TCR system, the second aim of our study was to test the kinetic proofreading (KPR) model.

The KPR model predicts that the half-life of the ligand-TCR interaction determines TCR signaling. Here, we wanted to implement a protocol to control this half-life by light and study the consequences for TCR signaling. To this end, we exploited the property of PhyB that its continuous exposure to 660 nm light triggers both the switch from PhyB OFF to ON and the reverse switch from ON to OFF (Figure 6A) as the absorption spectra of both PhyB states partially overlap (Rockwell et al., 2006). Thus, each individual PhyB molecule constantly shuttles between the ON and OFF state under 660 nm light, with high 660 nm intensities leading to a faster shuttling rate and thus to shorter binding duration (note that in Figure 5 continuous light was not used and the PhyB molecules stayed in their ON or OFF state for the duration of the experiment). Accordingly, continuous high intensity (100%) 660 nm light prevented calcium influx when PhyBt(660) was added to the GFP-PIFS-TCR cells (Figure 6B, orange line). After 390 s the constant 660 nm illumination was stopped, so that the PhyB molecules that were in the ON state at this moment were trapped in this state. This allowed them to bind long enough to the TCR and to induce a strong calcium response (Figure 6B). This experiment also demonstrates that the constant high intensity 660 nm illumination did not harm the cells.

Figure 6 with 1 supplement see all
The half-life of the ON state of PhyB determines TCR signaling.

(A) Schematics of the different PhyB conversions under 660 nm and 740 nm light. In the dark the PhyB states do not change in the timescales relevant for this work. (B) Calcium influx was measured as in Figure 5. GFP-PIFS-TCR cells were constantly illuminated with 100% intensity 660 nm light (orange line). After 150 s PhyBt(660) was added (arrow) and after 390 s the light was switched off. As controls, PhyBt(660) (blue line) or PhyBt(740) (red line) was added to the cells in the dark. The bars represent the illumination procedure during the measurement (grey = dark, orange = 660 nm light). (C) 20 nM PhyBt(660) was added (arrow) after 90 s to GFP-PIFS-TCR cells continuously illuminated with 660 nm light of the depicted intensities. Results in (B) and (C) show one experiment of n > 3. (D) Quantification of experiments done as in (C) with the indicated PhyBt concentrations. Duplicates are shown with connecting lines going through the mean.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.009
Figure 6—source data 1

Calcium influx quantification data at steady-state.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.011

The intensity of 660 nm light determines the half-life of both PhyB states and consequently the switch rates between the ON and the OFF state. However, the 80:20 molar ratio of PhyB ON to OFF molecules at photoequilibrium is largely independent of the light intensity (Figure 6A) (Bae and Choi, 2008; Smith et al., 2016). Lowering the 660 nm intensity increases the half-life of PhyB ON without altering its concentration, and hence may allow PhyBt to bind for longer durations to the GFP-PIFS-TCR. Indeed, at 4% and 2% constant 660 nm intensity, calcium influx was evoked (Figure 6C). These percentage values refer to the maximum intensity of 100% that was determined by the light source we used. We observed a threshold of the PhyB ON half-life in inducing a calcium response that was largely independent of the PhyBt concentration, a crucial property of TCR ligand discrimination (McKeithan, 1995) (Figure 6D and Figure 6—figure supplement 1A). This threshold half-life was at 3% 660 nm intensity. Thus, we were able to control TCR signaling by changing the intensity of continuous 660 nm light, suggesting that the duration of the ligand-TCR interaction controls calcium signaling.

Next, we tested whether very fast kinetics can terminate an ongoing TCR signal. GFP-PIFS-TCR cells were stimulated with PhyBt(660) in the dark, inducing a strong calcium response (Figure 6—figure supplement 1B). During this response the long binding events were changed to fast binding events by illuminating with high intensity continuous 660 nm light (32% and 16%). As expected, the calcium signal was stopped, similar as when using 740 nm light (Figure 6—figure supplement 1B and Figure 5D). The calcium response was not stopped when low intensity continuous 660 nm light (2% and 4%) was used, where the half-life of binding is still long. The threshold half-life of the PhyBt-GFP-PIFS-TCR interaction to maintain the calcium response was again at 3% 660 nm intensity (Figure 6—figure supplement 1C).

In conclusion, we engineered the opto-ligand-TCR system, in which one single ligand-TCR pair explores a wide range of different binding half-lives when changing the intensity of red light and in which other parameters of the interaction remain constant, because we have not mutated the binding interface.

A mathematical model describing KPR in the opto-ligand-TCR system

Next, we developed a mathematical model and confronted it with the experimental data, to obtain quantitative insight into how the half-life of the PhyB ON-TCR complex determines TCR signaling. The model comprises the PhyB ON-OFF cycle, binding of PhyBt to the TCR, and potentially KPR (Figure 7A, Figure 7—figure supplements 1 and 2 and Appendix 2). In the absence of KPR, the activity of each component in the signaling network depends only on the activity of its immediate upstream component(s), making TCR occupancy the ultimate source of ligand discrimination. In contrast, KPR assumes that the first signaling steps at the receptor in addition depend on the half-life of the ligand-TCR complex, while only the more downstream components respond exclusively to the activity of their immediate upstream component(s). We refer to the time required to complete the first half-life-dependent signaling steps as KPR duration or KPR time, τKPR.

Figure 7 with 5 supplements see all
T cells exploit a kinetic proofreading mechanism.

(A) The PhyB ON-OFF cycle, binding of PhyB ON to the TCR and kinetic proofreading (KPR) were combined into one model. (B) In this model the effective off-rate is a linear function, and (C) the effective affinity is the reciprocal of a linear function, of the 660 nm light intensity. (D) A likelihood ratio test (null hypothesis: τKPR = 0, i.e., no KPR; alternative hypothesis: τKPR > 0) strongly supports the existence of a KPR mechanism. (E) The amount of PhyBt bound to the GFP-PIFS-TCR cells and (F) calcium influx at different continuous 660 nm light intensities (from Figure 6D) and different PhyBt concentrations are plotted. The line and shaded area represent the fit and the estimated uncertainties of the KPR model. The data points represent the mean ±SEM of 6–9 replicates in (E), or individual data points of two experiments in (F).

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.012

We used a soluble TCR ligand for which - in case of antibodies or pMHC - it was shown that bivalent binding is required to activate the TCR (Boniface et al., 1998; Cochran et al., 2000; Kaye and Janeway, 1984; Minguet et al., 2007), and this most likely was also the case for our opto-ligand-TCR system (Figure 5—figure supplement 1C). Thus, the KPR duration in our system is the time from bivalent binding to the completion of the biochemical signaling steps (Figure 7—figure supplement 2).

KPR requires the bivalently bound PhyBt-TCR complex to exist for at least the KPR time, in order to generate a signal that then leads to a calcium response more downstream (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Davis and van der Merwe, 2006; Lever et al., 2016; McKeithan, 1995) (Figure 7A, bivalent binding is shown in Figure 7—figure supplement 2). Thus, the time delay between bivalent ligand binding and calcium influx consists of the KPR duration plus the extra time beyond KPR required for the additional signaling steps until opening of the calcium channels. The half-life of the bivalent PhyBt-TCR complex is determined by the sum of the light-independent off-rate of PhyB ON from the TCR, koff, and the light intensity-dependent rate ki with which PhyB molecules return to the OFF state, detaching from the TCR (Figure 7B).

In support of the model (Figure 7A), we experimentally demonstrated that the rate of converting PhyB from ON to OFF is the same for free PhyB and PIF-bound PhyB (Figure 7—figure supplement 3). These data imply that PhyB molecules also convert to OFF while being bound to PIF and thereby the PhyB-PIF interaction is lost. Hence, the effective off-rate and binding affinity of PhyB ON to the TCR are also light-dependent (Figure 7B,C). Taken together, the model predicts that the amount of TCR-bound PhyB decreases with increasing light intensity, which we confirmed experimentally (Figure 7—figure supplement 4). Importantly, the change of PhyB ON affinity is a straightforward consequence of the light-controlled PhyB ON half-life (this contrasts with mutated pMHC ligands (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Daniels et al., 2006; Davis and van der Merwe, 2006; Holler and Kranz, 2003; Lever et al., 2016), where affinity changes can be brought about by changes in both on- and off-rates, and potentially other parameters such as orientation of binding (Adams et al., 2011)).

Experimental data and modeling demonstrate that KPR takes place

Although we intended to only change the ligand-TCR half-life with light, we also changed the affinity, due to the intrinsic relationship between off-rate and affinity. Hence, the intensity of 660 nm light regulates both the half-life of PhyB ON and the amount of bound PhyBt. To disentangle the half-life from the amount of ligand-bound TCRs, we asked whether calcium signaling was directly sensitive to the PhyB ON half-life through KPR or solely responded to the level of TCR occupancy with PhyB ON (absence of KPR). We fitted both mathematical models, the one with and the one without KPR, to the PhyBt binding and calcium signaling data together. Only the model with KPR yielded a satisfactory fit, and a likelihood ratio test, with the absence of KPR being the null hypothesis and the presence of KPR being the alternative hypothesis, showed highly significant support for the KPR model (p<10−6, Figure 7D,E,F and Figure 7—figure supplement 5). Taken together, these findings strongly support the existence of KPR at the TCR.

The KPR time in Jurkat cells using the opto-ligand-TCR is 8 s

The steady-state data (Figure 7E,F) prevented the model to deduce the KPR time τKPR, yielding only the product τKPR · koff. To overcome this limitation, we determined the conversion kinetics of PhyB in our experimental system by illuminating PhyBt OFF with short light pulses of 660 nm light and subsequently switching to darkness. This protocol traps the ligands in the ON state, which we quantified through the resulting calcium signal (Figure 8A and Appendix 2). The resulting kinetics of switching PhyB to the ON state was highly consistent across different light intensities and PhyBt concentrations (Figure 8B) and were described well by the mathematical model. Importantly, combining the steady-state data (Figure 7E,F) and the kinetic data (Figure 8B) was sufficiently informative to identify all five parameters of the model (Figure 8—figure supplement 1). Utilizing the kinetic data, we determined the half-life of the PhyB ON-TCR complex, ln2 /(koff +ki), which varied from 40 s to 2 s over the range of light intensities used (Figure 8C). We determined the threshold half-life of the bivalent PhyBt-TCR interaction, i.e. the proofreading duration τKPR, to be 8 s (95% CI: 3 s, 19 s) (Figure 8D). Thus, for a threshold half-life of bivalent binding of PhyBt to the TCR complex of 8 s, signaling from the active TCR is half-maximal. Furthermore, our results largely exclude the possibility of fast rebinding events, which would have effectively prolonged the half-life of the PhyB ON-TCR complex sensed by a KPR mechanism (Aleksic et al., 2010; Govern et al., 2010) (Appendix 2).

Figure 8 with 1 supplement see all
Kinetic proofreading at the TCR occurs with a half-life of 8 s.

(A) 20 nM PhyBt(740) was added to GFP-PIFS-TCR cells and a 660 nm pulse of 100% intensity was given for the indicated durations. The calcium influx was quantified over time, indicating that longer pulse durations switch more PhyB OFF molecules to the ON state. Stimuli addition is marked by an arrow and the illumination procedure by a bar above the graph (grey = dark, orange = 660 nm). (B) Experiment as in (A) were performed using 6.3 nM or 20 nM PhyBt and 32% or 100% intensity 660 nm light. The data is shown together with the fit and estimated SD. Results in (A) and (B) show one experiment of n > 3. (C) The estimated half-lives of the PhyB-TCR complex in dependence on the light intensity. (D) The profile likelihood of the KPR time shows that the 95% confidence interval (CI) ranges from 3 s to 19 s, while the best-fit value is 8 s.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.019
Figure 8—source data 1

Calcium influx quantification data for different 660 nm pulse durations and PhyBt concentrations.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.021

Discussion

In this study, we engineered a tailor-made optogenetic system, the opto-ligand-TCR, to control a ligand-receptor interaction by light, allowing us to overcome current experimental limitations. In fact, one single ligand-TCR pair (the PhyBt - GFP-PIFS-TCR pair) can explore a wide range of different binding half-lives when changing the intensity of 660 nm light. Indeed, our approach exploits the remarkable, but in optogenetics so far unexplored, biophysical property of PhyB that the intensity of 660 nm light determines the half-life of the PhyB ON state (Bae and Choi, 2008; Rockwell et al., 2006; Smith et al., 2016) and thus the half-life of the ligand-TCR interaction. Other parameters of the interaction remain constant, because the binding interface is always the same under the different light conditions. Together with a mathematical model, our data show that KPR can explain ligand discrimination by T cells.

Furthermore, using the PhyB-PIF pair enables switching ON and OFF ligand binding (short pulse of 660 and 740 nm light, respectively) in less than a second (Figure 8B). Importantly, we show that 740 nm light actively disrupts an existing PhyB-PIF interaction, rather than preventing rebinding. Both features, the light-induced switch between both states and the light intensity-dependent change in the binding dynamics, is only found with phytochromes and not with other optogenetic or synthetic systems (Kolar et al., 2018; Smith et al., 2016).

Previously, light has been used to induce ligand-binding to the TCR. A lysine side chain of the peptide presented by MHC was modified with a light-sensitive caging group (Huse et al., 2007). This modified pMHC could not bind to the TCR until a short UV light pulse (microsecond range) removed the caging group. Subsequently, pMHC could bind and stimulate signaling. In contrast to the opto-ligand-TCR system, this approach is not reversible, thus not allowing varying the half-life. Another approach is presented in the accompanying paper by Tischer and Weiner (Tischer and Weiner, 2019). It uses a blue-light responsive optogenetic tool, namely the LOVTRAP system (Wang et al., 2016). In this case LOV2 binds to a chimeric antigen receptor and the blue light intensity controls the duration of binding. In analogy to our data, they show that the half-life of ligand binding controlled T cell activation.

The opto-ligand-TCR system was not only able to provoke calcium and Erk MAP kinase signaling (not shown), but also led to the stimulation of the T cell as measured by the upregulation of the activation marker CD69. This is in line with systems where other binding domains were fused to the TCR (single chain Fv and DNA, (Minguet et al., 2007; Schamel and Reth, 2012; Taylor et al., 2017), indicating that the TCR can be fully stimulated in synthetic settings and not only by pMHC. This feature is also exploited in chimeric antigen receptors used for cancer immunotherapy (Lim and June, 2017; Sadelain, 2016).

Our opto-ligand-TCR system allowed us to show that T cells discriminate between ligands due to differences in the ligand-TCR half-lives (Figure 8), consistent with KPR models (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Davis and van der Merwe, 2006; Lever et al., 2016; McKeithan, 1995). Using the identical ligand-TCR pair for the different half-lives excludes differences in binding geometry (Adams et al., 2011), forces (Kim et al., 2009; Liu et al., 2014) or conformational changes (Gil et al., 2002) as discriminatory parameters in this setup. Furthermore, we measured total binding, the binding kinetics and the activation readout in the same experimental system. Thus, all parameters for the mathematical model are derived using identical conditions. This is often different when using pMHC and variants thereof as ligands for the TCR: the binding parameters are derived by surface plasmon resonance at 25°C using recombinant parts of the proteins (ectodomains of pMHC and only the immunoglobulin domains of the TCRα and TCRβ subunits) and the activation assays are done with native, membrane or surface bound proteins at 37°C (Aleksic et al., 2010; Dushek et al., 2011; Govern et al., 2010; Holler and Kranz, 2003; Krogsgaard et al., 2003). Thus, it is often unclear how well these different biological setups can be compared and compiled into one model.

Besides our and other studies on the correlation of binding parameters with the biological activity of the ligands, differential CD3ζ phosphorylation is another hint for KPR. CD3ζ is a signaling subunit of the TCR that can be partially or fully phosphorylated. Low affinity pMHC, which are non-stimulatory, lead to partial phosphorylation, whereas high affinity pMHC, which are stimulatory, lead to full phosphorylation of CD3ζ (Madrenas et al., 1995; van Oers et al., 1993). This is consistent with the idea that the low affinity ligands only bind shortly, not allowing all phosphorylation steps to be completed and high affinity ligands bind long enough to complete all phosphorylations. Indeed, increasing the concentration of the low affinity binders did not lead to full CD3ζ phosphorylation (Madrenas et al., 1997), being consistent with KPR.

Interestingly, changing the half-life of PhyB ON and thus the lifetime of the ligand-TCR interaction also altered the amount of bound receptors, and with the help of the mathematical model we could show that the half-life was the decisive parameter for the magnitude of T cell stimulation as measured by calcium influx. We calculated the threshold half-life above which TCR stimulation occurs, i.e., the KPR duration, to be 8 s. For soluble TCR ligands, as we have used here, it has been shown that bivalent binding is required to trigger the TCR (Boniface et al., 1998; Cochran et al., 2000; Kaye and Janeway, 1984), possibly due to both a lack of clustering and stabilization of conformational changes of the TCR (Minguet et al., 2007; Schamel et al., 2017; Swamy et al., 2016). Indeed, also in our case PhyB monomers did not activate the TCR whereas PhyB tetramers (PhyBt) did. Thus, the PhyBt ligands needed to bind for at least 8 s bivalently, in order to stimulate calcium influx that itself occurred later. Of note, the KPR duration is not identical to the time delay between ligand binding and calcium influx or other downstream events (Figure 9). A time delay is a prerequisite for KPR, but does not necessarily indicate that KPR takes place.

Kinetic proofreading determines T cell activation.

Ligands that bind shorter than the KPR time of 8 s (half-life of binding) fail to induce efficient TCR signaling. Ligands that bind longer allow the completion of several biochemical steps (white arrows) that result in an activatory signal by the TCR. This signal provokes further signaling (grey arrows) that ultimately leads to T cell activation.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.022

In line with our 8 s KPR time, the accompanying paper by Tischer and Weiner found a KPR time of approximately 7 s (Tischer and Weiner, 2019). This study also used Jurkat cells, but a different optogenetic system, a different activation readout and a chimeric antigen receptor instead of a TCR. Thus, independent of the readout and exact design of the optogenetic system Jurkat cells have a TCR/-chimeric antigen receptor based KPR time of 7–8 s. Most other studies have calculated a KPR time of between 1–5 s (Aleksic et al., 2010; Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Daniels et al., 2006; Govern et al., 2010; Holler and Kranz, 2003; Kersh et al., 1998) and the time delay between ligand binding and calcium influx was 7 s in one study (Huse et al., 2007). In contrast to those studies, our and the Tischer/Weiner systems lack the co-receptor CD4 and CD8 that have been shown to increase the speed of signaling, most likely by efficiently recruiting the kinase Lck to the TCR (Artyomov et al., 2010; Holler and Kranz, 2003; Veillette et al., 1988). Differences in the cellular background (primary murine T cells versus the human T cell line Jurkat) might also contribute to differences in the KPR time, e.g., if the concentration of kinases or phosphatases was different (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005).

The half-life of the interaction is a population average over many binding events. Thus, it might be that individual binding events longer than the threshold half-life (8 s in our case) are the ones that triggered T cell activation, as suggested recently (Lin et al., 2019). The opto-ligand-TCR system is well suited to precisely control the exact binding time (and not the average half-life) by using 740 nm light to break the ligand-TCR interaction.

An aspect to consider in KPR is a potential contribution of fast rebinding of ligands to TCRs (Aleksic et al., 2010; Govern et al., 2010). When the on-rate of multivalent binding of the pMHC-TCR interaction is sufficiently fast, dissociated TCRs are rebound before KPR modifications are removed (Aleksic et al., 2010; Govern et al., 2010), effectively prolonging the half-life of the TCR-ligand interaction. However, the on-rate in our opto-ligand-TCR system seems to be too slow to significantly contribute to this effect (Appendix 2).

Our approach, including the designed PIFS mutant, could be a blueprint to study other ligand-receptor pairs and to understand how the kinetics of protein-protein interactions governs the activity of these binding events in diverse biological systems. Further, the opto-ligand-receptor approach is also well suited to locally induce signaling by focusing the light beam to the region of interest.

Materials and methods

Key resources table
Reagent type
(species) or resource
DesignationSource or referenceIdentifiersAdditional information
Genetic reagent
(Aequorea victoria)
moxGFPPMID: 26158227Erik Snapp (Albert Einstein
College of Medicine),
Addgene plasmid # 68070
Genetic reagent
(Arabidopsis thaliana)
PIF6PMID: 29603429
Genetic reagent
(Homo sapiens)
HA1.7 TCRβPMID: 17188005
Genetic reagent
(Mus musculus)
scFvPMID: 17188005
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
JurkatPMID: 15057788Arthur Weiss
(HHMI, UCSF)
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat scFv-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
scFv-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(wt)-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
PIF(wt)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(Q)-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
PIF(Q)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(A)-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
PIF(A)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(SS)-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
PIF(SS)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(SSQ)-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
PIF(SSQ)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat PIF(SSA)-TCRβ;
Jurkat PIFS-TCRβ
this paperJurkat expressing
PIF(SSA)-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat GFP-F1-PIFS-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
GFP-F1-PIFS-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat GFP-F2-PIFS-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
GFP-F2-PIFS-TCRβ
Cell line
(Homo sapiens)
Jurkat GFP-F3-PIFS-TCRβthis paperJurkat expressing
GFP-F3-PIFS-TCRβ
Cell line
(H. sapiens)
Jurkat GFP-noF-PIFS-TCRβ;
Jurkat GFP-PIFS-TCRβ
this paperJurkat expressing
GFP-noF-PIFS-TCRβ
Antibodyanti-Vβ3 Jovi3Ancell Cat# 102-020-5 µg/ml
Antibodybiotin-conjugated
anti-GFP
Rockland Cat#
600-106-215
RRID:AB_2182045 µg/ml
AntibodyAPC-conjugated
anti-CD69
Thermo Fisher
Cat# MHCD6905
RRID:AB_103728071:200
AntibodyAPC-conjugated
anti-mouse
SouthernBiotech
Cat# 1031-11L
-1:200
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PhyB1-651-Aviag-His6;
pMH17
PMID: 27884151
Recombinant
DNA reagent
p171PMID: 18832155Lars-Oliver Essen
(University Marburg)
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(wt)-TCRβ;
pOSY015
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(Q)-TCRβ;
pOSY016
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(A)-TCRβ;
pOSY017
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
scFv-TCRβ;
pOSY019
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(SS)-TCRβ;
pOSY026
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(SSQ)-TCRβ;
pOSY027
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
PIF(SSA)-TCRβ;
PIFS-TCRβ;
pOSY028
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(wt);
pOSY061
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(Q);
pOSY062
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(A);
pOSY063
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(SS);
pOSY064
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(SSQ);
pOSY065
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
MBP-PIF(SSA);
pOSY066
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
GFP-F1-PIFS-TCRβ;
pOSY073
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
GFP-F2-PIFS-TCRβ;
pOSY074
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
GFP-F3-PIFS-TCRβ;
pOSY075
this papersee Table S1
Recombinant
DNA reagent
GFP-noF-PIFS-TCRβ;
GFP-PIFS-TCRβ;
pOSY076
this papersee Table S1
Peptide,
recombinant
protein
PE-conjugated
streptavidin
Thermo Fisher Cat# S866-
Peptide,
recombinant
protein
DyLight650-conjugated
streptavidin
Thermo Fisher Cat# 84547-

Molecular cloning

Request a detailed protocol

All plasmids generated in this study were created using standard molecular cloning techniques like polymerase chain reaction, restriction enzyme digestion and ligation or Gibson assembly (Gibson et al., 2009). The plasmids are listed in Table S1 together with the corresponding coded protein, a brief description of the used components and the cloning strategy. The primers used as described in Supplementary file 1 are summarized in Supplementary file 2. Plasmid maps and nucleotide sequences in GeneBank format are available as supplementary information. Plasmid maps were generated with Geneious 6.1.8 (https://www.geneious.com). The integrity of each plasmid was verified by restriction enzyme digestion and Sanger sequencing. The plasmid containing moxGFP was a gift from Erik Snapp (Addgene plasmid # 68070) (Costantini et al., 2015).

Protein production and purification

View detailed protocol

The production of PhyB1-651-Aviag-His6 was performed similarly as described before (Smith et al., 2016). Briefly, the PhyB-coding plasmid pMH17 was co-transformed into E. coli BL21(DE3) with plasmid p171 (Rohmer et al., 2008), which codes for the Synechocystis enzymes heme oxygenase and phycocyanobilin synthase, necessary for phycocyanobilin production. Co-transformed cells were selected with 100 μg/ml ampicillin and 40 μg/ml kanamycin. Bacterial cultures were grown at 30°C in lysogeny broth until OD600 reached 0.6, then expression was induced with 1 mM isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) and 0.4% (w/v) arabinose in the presence of 50 μM biotin. Protein production was sustained for 20 hr at 18°C in the dark. Following centrifugation of the bacteria for 8 min at 6500 g, the cells were resuspended in lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES, 500 mM NaCl, 5% glycerol, 0.5 mM TCEP, 20 mM imidazole, pH 7.4) and disrupted using a French Press (APV 2000, APV Manufacturing) at 1,000 bar. The lysate was cleared from debris by centrifuging twice at 30,000 g at 4°C for 30 min. The cleared lysate was loaded onto a Ni-NTA Superflow cartridge (Qiagen) using an Äkta Explorer chromatography system (GE Healthcare). After washing with 30 column volumes lysis buffer, purified PhyB1-651-Avitag-His6 was eluted with 10 column volumes elution buffer (50 mM HEPES, 500 mM NaCl, 5% glycerol, 0.5 mM TCEP, 500 mM imidazole, pH 7.4). The eluate fractions containing the purified proteins were pooled and the buffer was exchanged to PBS (phosphate-buffered saline, Sigma-Aldrich) containing 0.5 mM TCEP and 10% glycerol using a HiPrep 26/10 desalting column (GE Healthcare).

The expression and purification of the different MBP-PIF61-100 proteins was performed analogous to PhyB, with the difference that the plasmids pOSY061 until pOSY066 were transformed individually without p171, protein expression was induced using only IPTG and no biotin was added to the medium.

PhyB tetramers (PhyBt) were formed by mixing Ni-NTA column-purified PhyB1-651-Avitag-His6 in a 10:1 molar ratio with PE- or DyLight650-conjugated streptavidin (Thermo Fisher) and incubating the mixture for 2 hr at room temperature in the dark. The formed PhyB tetramers were separated from the excess of PhyB monomers by size-exclusion chromatography on a HiLoad Superdex 200 pg column (GE Healthcare) using PBS with 0.5 mM TCEP as running buffer.

Analytical size-exclusion chromatography

Request a detailed protocol

To test the interaction of PhyB and MBP-PIF, PhyB was illuminated with saturating amounts of 660 or 740 nm light and MBP-PIF was added as depicted. Following incubation for 1 hr at room temperature in the dark, the samples were separated by size-exclusion chromatography on a Superdex 200 10/300 GL column (GE Healthcare) using PBS with 0.5 mM TCEP as running buffer.

Cell line generation and cultivation

Request a detailed protocol

Jurkat E6.1 and derived cell lines were cultivated in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM HEPES, 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml streptomycin (all Thermo Fisher) at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere of 5% CO2. HEK 293 T cells were cultured in DMEM (Thermo Fisher) supplemented as the RPMI medium at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere of 7.5% CO2.

For the generation of Jurkat-based cell lines stably expressing the chimeric TCRβ chains, we used lentiviral transduction as described earlier (Dopfer et al., 2014). Briefly, HEK 293 T cells were transfected with the lentiviral packaging plasmid pCMV dR8.74, the envelope plasmid pMD2 vsvG (both kind gifts from Didier Trono) and the respective transfer plasmid by calcium phosphate precipitation. 6 hr post-transfection the medium was replaced and lentiviral particles were produced by the HEK 293 T cells for 48 hr. Lentiviral particle-containing HEK 293T supernatant was harvested, filtered through a 0.45 µm syringe filter and concentrated by overnight centrifugation at 3,000 g at 4°C through a 20% (w/v in PBS) sucrose cushion. After discarding the supernatant, the viral particles were resuspended in medium using 1/100th of the harvested volume. Jurkat cells were transduced with different dilutions of concentrated lentiviral particles and 48 hr after transduction, surface expression and cell viability were analyzed by flow cytometry.

The identity of the Jurkat cells was confirmed by the binding to the antibody C305 that only binds to the TCR expressed on Jurkat cells (Weiss and Stobo, 1984). The identity of the HEK 293 T cells was not confirmed. All cells were routinely tested for mycoplasma and devoid of contamination.

Cell surface staining for flow cytometry

View detailed protocol

Cells were stained for surface proteins according to standard protocols. Briefly, cells were washed once with washing buffer (PBS supplemented with 1% FBS), then incubated for 30 min at 4°C in a diluted solution of the labeling antibody as depicted in the key resources table. Finally, the cells were washed twice as before and analyzed on a MACSQuant X flow cytometer (Miltenyi). The labeling reagents used in this study were anti-Vβ3 Jovi3 (Ancell), biotin-conjugated anti-GFP (Rockland Immunochemicals), APC-conjugated anti-CD69 (Thermo Fisher), APC-conjugated anti-mouse (Thermo Fisher) and PE-conjugated streptavidin (Thermo Fisher).

Light-dependent PhyBt binding to the cell surface

View detailed protocol

Binding of PhyBt to the different cells lines was performed analogous to the cell surface staining with antibodies, but instead of labeled antibodies 100 nM pre-illuminated Phycoerythrin (PE)-labeled PhyBt(660) or PhyBt(740) were added to the cells and incubated for 30 min at 4°C in the dark. Subsequent washing steps and the measurement at the flow cytometer were executed under green light.

To evaluate the amount of surface bound PhyBt under constant illumination with varying intensities of 660 nm light, different concentrations of PhyBt(660) were added to GFP-PIFS-TCR cells under illumination conditions as depicted and incubated for 90 s at 37°C. Subsequently, the cells were transferred to a ten-fold excess of ice-cold washing buffer, immediately centrifuged for 10 s under green light and the supernatant aspirated. After a second washing step, surface-bound PhyBt was quantified by flow cytometry. Unspecific binding was accounted for and subtracted from each sample by adding ten-fold diluted amounts of PhyBt(660) to control samples that were treated with washing buffer during the 90 s incubation step.

Calcium influx measurement

View detailed protocol

Five million cells were centrifuged for 5 min at 300 g and the medium was discarded. The cell pellet was resuspended in 1 ml stimulation medium (RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 1% FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 10 mM HEPES, 100 U/ml penicillin and 100 µg/ml streptomycin) with 0.1% (v/v) pluronic F-127 and 4 µM Indo-1 AM (all Thermo Fisher) and incubated in the dark for 30 min at 37°C. The stained cells were washed and kept on ice in the dark until the measurement. For calcium influx, cells were diluted 1:20 with pre-warmed stimulation medium and maintained at 37°C during the event collection on a MACSQuant X flow cytometer. After fluorescence baseline acquisition, stimuli were added or activated by illumination as depicted. If not indicated otherwise PhyBt were added to a final concentration of 20 nM.

For the graphs showing the percent of responding cells, the events above the 90th percentile during baseline acquisition were quantified using FlowJo 9 (FlowJo LLC). To calculate the calcium influx values (a.u.), average Indo-1 ratio values after stimuli addition (250–400 s) minus baseline values (30–60 s) were normalized for each experiment using an internal control of 20 nM PhyBt(660) in the dark.

CD69 upregulation

Request a detailed protocol

200,000 Jurkat or GFP-PIFS-TCR cells were seeded per well in a 96-well flat-bottom plate in 100 µl stimulation medium and incubated for 1 hr in the cultivating incubator. Meanwhile, streptavidin sepharose beads (GE Healthcare) were washed with PBS and then incubated with 5 µg purified PhyB per µl beads (diluted in PBS) at 37°C for 30 min. The beads were washed twice with PBS and resuspended in stimulation medium at 2 µl beads per 100 µl medium. The diluted beads were illuminated as described, 100 µl bead suspension added per well to the cells and the cells stimulated for 6 hr in the incubator. Following the incubation, surface expression of CD69 was analyzed by flow cytometry as described above.

Determination of PhyB conversion rates

Request a detailed protocol

50 µg purified PhyB(660) or PhyB(740) was mixed with a 6-fold excess of MBP-PIF(wt) or an equal volume of buffer (PBS with 0.5 mM TCEP) and incubated for 60 min at room temperature. Each protein mixture was transferred to a quartz cuvette, a blank measurement was taken and under constant illumination with 70 µmol m−2 s−1 660 or 740 nm light difference absorbance spectra were acquired every 10 s using a HR4000 spectrometer in combination with a DT-Mini-2-GS light source (Ocean Optics). We quantified the conformational change of PhyB by subtracting the minimum absorbance value from the maximum value and plotted this ΔΔA value against the time of illumination (not shown). From the resulting curves, we calculated the photoconversion rates by first order association kinetics nonlinear regression using the software Prism 6 (GraphPad Software). Differences in the conversion rates with or without MBP-PIF were tested by two-way ANOVA using Prism 6.

Illumination devices

Request a detailed protocol

For the different experiments performed in this study, we used two types of illumination devices. One device was built as a closed box with an array of red (Osram, LH W5AM, Mouser Electronics) and far-red (LZ4-00R308, LED Engin) light-emitting diodes (LEDs) at the top, resulting in a planar light source. Ventilated openings in the box in combination with light traps allowed gas exchange for the use of the device in an incubator. This illumination box was used for all pre-illumination steps, the CD69 upregulation experiments and PhyB conversion rate measurements.

The second device was built together with Opto Biolabs as a cylinder enclosing a reaction tube in the center. Surrounding the reaction tube, is a water-filled space, which is connected to a 37°C water bath to keep a physiological temperature. Further outside we placed rings of red (Super Bright Red, Kingbright Electronic Europe) and far-red (LED740 series, Roithner Lasertechnik) LEDs, pointing towards the reaction tube. An opaque outmost cylinder shields the sample from external light. The cylindrical illumination device was used for all calcium experiments and experiments under constant 660 nm illumination in combination with a MACSQuant X flow cytometer.

Repetition of experiments and data presentation

Request a detailed protocol

In this study, all graphs derived from data of multiple experiments depict individual data points for less than three replicates and average values for three or more replicates. The uncertainties of these experiments are shown by the standard error of the mean (SEM). For graphs displaying representative experiments, ‘n’ in the legend defines the number of independent experiments that the depicted results were done.

Appendix 1

Glossary

PhyBPhytochrome B (photoreceptor of Arabidopsis thaliana), here only the first 651 amino acids are used, since this part is sufficient to bind PIF under 660 nm, but not under 740 nm light.
PIFPhyB-interacting factor, here the first 100 aa of A. thaliana PIF6 are used, since they are sufficient to bind to PhyB.
PIFSA mutant version of functional PIF developed in this study, that can move through the secretory pathway to the cell surface and remain in a functional conformation, i.e., it is still capable of binding PhyB.
PhyBtFluorescently labeled streptavidin-based tetramers of PhyB.
PhyBt(660)PhyBt pre-illuminated with 660 nm light, so that equilibrium is reached, in which 80% of the PhyB molecules are in their ON state
PhyBt(740)PhyBt pre-illuminated with 740 nm light, so that all PhyB molecules are in the OFF state
PhyB ONPhyB in the active conformation allowing binding to PIF with nanomolar affinity (Figure 1).
PhyB OFFPhyB in the inactive conformation, in which they cannot bind to PIF (Figure 1).
τKPRThe KPR time or KPR duration. The half-life of the bivalent binding of the soluble ligand to the TCR needs to be at least this time to induce downstream, activatory signaling.
moxGFPA GFP mutant (S30R, Y29N, C48S, F64L, S65T, C70S, Q80R, F99S, N105T, Y145F, M153T, V163A, I171V, A206K) that was optimized for the folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ox) and that is expressed as a monomer (m).
TCRT cell receptor. The receptor on T cells controlling T cell activation. It consists of the TCRα, TCRβ, CD3γ, CD3δ, CD3ε and ζ chains.
PIFS-TCRA preliminary non-functional TCR chimera, in which PIFS is fused to the ectodomain of the TCRβ subunit.
pMHCPeptide bound to Major Histocompatibility Complex constitutes the ligand for the TCR.
GFP-PIFS-TCROur engineered TCR, in which the moxGFP and PIFS are fused to the ectodomain of the TCRβ subunit.
GFP-PIFS-TCR cellsJurkat E6.1 T cells expressing the GFP-PIFS-TCR.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.060

Appendix 2

Mathematical model of TCR activation by the optogenetic ligand

Dynamics of phytochrome B conversion

Phytochrome B (PhyB) exists in two conformations that can be reversibly interconverted by light with intensity-dependent rates ka and ki (Figure 7—figure supplement 2A). The two conformations, which are referred to as PhyB ON respectively PhyB OFF, are distinguished by their ability to interact with PhyB interacting factor (PIF), as described in the next section. The rates of conformational conversion depend on the wavelength λ and the intensity I of the light. While the dependence on λ is very complicated, the rates depend linearly on the intensity (Smith et al., 2016),

(1a) kaλ,I=caλI+kr,a ,
(1b) kiλ,I=ciλI+kr,i .

The rates kr,a and kr,i describe thermal relaxation. However, the timescales used in the experiments are sufficiently small so that thermal relaxation can be neglected (Smith et al., 2016), i.e., we set kr,a = kr,i = 0. This implies that the conversion between the ON state and the OFF state of PhyB freezes when the system is switched to darkness.

The equilibrium constant of PhyB conversion, KL, is given by the ratio of the conversion rates and depends only on the wavelength λ,

(2) KLλ=kaλ,I/kiλ,I=caλ/ciλ

Thus, an altered light intensity affects the rates of PhyB conversion but leaves the equilibrium constant unchanged. The conversion dynamics of PhyB at concentration Ptot is described by the law of mass action. The PhyB ON concentration (denoted by PON) is given by the following ordinary differential equation (Figure 7—figure supplement 2A),

(3) dPON/dt=kaI Ptot-PON-kiI PON .

To keep the notation simple, the dependence of the conversion rates on the wavelength λ has been dropped. The steady-state solution of Equation (3) depends only on λ and the total PhyB concentration,

(4) PON,eq(λ)=ϕON,eq(λ)Ptot.

Here we introduced the equilibrium fraction of PhyB ON,

(5) ϕON,eq(λ)=KL(λ)/(1+KL(λ)).

Thus changing the intensity at fixed wavelength does not impact the concentration of PhyB in the ON conformation.

The table below shows the equilibrium properties of PhyB conversion for the wavelengths used in the experiments (Mancinelli, 1994; Smith et al., 2016).

λϕa,eqKL
660nm0.84
740nm0.010.01

Binding model for PhyB interacting with GFP-PIFS-TCR

Monomeric PhyB binds the GFP-PIFS-TCR only in its active conformation (PhyB ON), while the inactive conformation does not interact with the GFP-PIFS-TCR (for simplicity the GFP-PIFS-TCR is called PIF-TCR in the remainder of the description of the mathematical model). We assume the total number of PhyB molecules to be in excess over the total number of PIF-TCR molecules to assure that the concentration of free PhyB is not depleted even if saturation is reached. We first consider the system kept in darkness (i.e., no conformational conversion of PhyB takes place) and PhyB ON at a fixed concentration PON (Figure 7—figure supplement 2B). The rate of change of the concentration of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complexes, denoted by ya, is described by mass action kinetics,

(6) dya/dt=konPON1-ya-koffya .

The total amount of PIF-TCR on the surface of the T cell has been set to 1, i.e., Equation (6) yields the amount of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complexes as fraction of all PIF-TCRs. The steady-state solution ya,eq is determined by the product of the binding affinity K = kon/koff and the concentration PON,

(7) ya,eqPON=KPON/1+KPON .

We now consider the interaction of PhyB and PIF-TCR in the presence of light of wavelength λ and intensity I. If PhyB is in excess over PIF-TCR, the conversion dynamics of unbound PhyB is given by Equation (3). Next to the formation and dissociation of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complexes, light absorption allows for the transition of PhyB ON to PhyB OFF when PhyB ON is in complex with PIF-TCR (Figure 7—figure supplement 2C, left). In this state the complex can either dissociate with off-rate k’off or PhyB converts to its ON conformation with rate ka. Importantly, the conversion rates of PhyB do not depend on whether PhyB is bound to PIF or not (Figure 7—figure supplement 3). The complex of PIF-TCR and PhyB OFF is very short-lived such that we assume k’off >>ka. In this limit the amount of PhyB OFF bound to PIF-TCR can be neglected (Figure 7—figure supplement 2C, right), and the dynamics of the formation of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complexes is given by (as above, the total amount PIF-TCR on the T cell has been set to 1),

(8) dya/dt=konPON1-ya-koff+kiIya .

This is the same dynamics as in darkness (Equation 6) but dissociation is determined by an intensity-dependent effective off-rate,

(9) koff*I=koff+kiI .

Thus, the PhyB-PIF system allows for tuning the off-rate in a linear manner by changing the light intensities (Figure 7B). Consequently, the affinity becomes intensity-dependent as well (Figure 7C),

(10) K*I=kon/koff*I .

The effective affinity equals the affinity in Equation (7) if I = 0. It is the product of the effective affinity and the concentration of PhyB ON that determines the steady-state solution of Equation (8),

(11) ya,eqPON,I=K*IPON/1+K*IPON .

This is an important finding. Rather than just changing the rate of dissociation with light intensity, the amount of bound PIF-TCRs declines as well, which we confirmed experimentally (Figure 7—figure supplement 4). It is therefore critical to take this effect readily into account.

Binding of oligomeric PhyB to PIF-TCR

To account for the oligomeric structure of the PhyB ligands used in the experiments, the concepts outlined above are generalized to account for multivalent binding. The principal difference between mono- and multivalent binding is found in the corresponding dose-response binding curves. While monovalent binding is a strictly increasing function of ligand concentration eventually reaching saturation, multivalent binding is characterized by a bell-shaped dose-response curve (Perelson, 1981). Indeed, our data are in line with this as the calcium response decreases at high concentrations (Figure 6D).

For simplicity we model the PhyB ligands as dimers, and we denote the concentration of PhyB oligomers with j subunits in the ON conformation by Pj (j = 0, 1 and 2). At total concentration Ptot (= P0 + P1 + P2), the dynamics of PhyB conversion is given by

(12a) dP1/dt=2 ka(I)(PtotP1P2)ki(I) P1ka(I) P1+2 ki(I) P2 ,
(12b) dP2/dt=kaI P1-2 kiI P2 ,
(12c) P0= Ptot-P1-P2 .

The amount of PhyB ON subunits is PON = P1+2P2. The solution for the initial condition P0(0)=Ptot, P1(0) = P2(0)=0 is given by

(13a)PON(t)=2 [1e(1+KL) ki(I) t] KL1+KL Ptot ,(13b)P2(t)=[12 e(1+KL) ki(I) t+e2(1+KL) ki(I) t] (KL1+KL)2 Ptot ,(13c)P1(t)= PON(t)2 P2(t) ,(13d)P0(t)= Ptot PON(t)+P2(t) .

The steady-state solution is

(14a)PON,eq=2 KL1+KL Ptot ,(14b)P1,eq= 2 KL(1+KL)2 Ptot ,(14c)P2,eq=(KL1+KL)2 Ptot ,(14d)P0,eq= 1(1+KL)2 Ptot .

This is accompanied by the binding dynamics. Next to the fraction of unbound PIF-TCR (=T), there are three possible binding states (Figure 7—figure supplement 2D): the PhyB ON subunit of P1 being in complex with PIF-TCR (= y1,1), one of the two PhyB ON subunits of P2 being in complex with PIF-TCR (= y2,1), and both PhyB ON subunits of P2 each in complex with a PIF-TCR (= y2,2). The corresponding rates of changes are described by mass action kinetics,

(15a) dy1,1/dt=kon P1T-koff+kiI y1,1-kaI y1,1+kiI y2,1+2 kiI y2,2 ,
(15b) dy2,1/dt=2 kon P2T(koff+ki(I)) y2,1+ ka(I) y1,1ki(I) y2,1qon y2,1T+2 qoff y2,2 ,
(15c) dy2,2/dt=qon y2,1T-2 qoff+kiI y2,2 ,
(15d) 1=T+y1,1+y2,1+2 y2,2 .

The last equation describes the conservation of total PIF-TCR, which, as above, we have set to 1. As a consequence, the binding rate of receptor cross-linking, i.e., PhyB tetramers binding bivalently to two TCRs, qon assumes the unit of an inverse time, making the cross-linking affinity Q = qon/qoff dimensionless.

Since there are two binding steps necessary to cross-link two PIF-TCRs, with each step potentially having its own off-rate, there are also two effective light-dependent off-rates,

(16a) koff(I)=koff+ki(I),
(16b) qoff(I)=qoff+ki(I).

Consequently, both affinities, the binding affinity from solution K and the (dimensionless) cross-link affinity Q, are affected by the light intensity,

(17a) K*I=kon/koff*I ,
(17b) Q*I=qon/qoff*I .

To find the steady-state density of unbound PIF-TCRs, Teq(PON,I), we define ξ(I) = ki/k*off(I) and solve the following, effectively quadratic, equation for T,

(18) 1=T+K*IPONT+2 P2+KL PON ξI1+1+KL+Q*IT ξI Q*IK*IT2 .

In the later section on model fitting, we need the steady-state amounts of cross-linked PIF-TCRs, yX-Link = 2 y2,2,eq, and bound PhyB ligands, ybound = y1,1,eq + y2,1,eq + y2,2,eq, which are given by,

(19a) yX-LinkPON,P2,I=2 P2+KL PON ξI Q*IK*ITeqPON,I21+1+KL+Q*ITeqPON,I ξI ,
(19b) yboundPON,P2,I=1-TeqPON,I-yX-LinkPON,P2,I .

Kinetic proofreading of TCR-ligand binding by T cells

To carry out their immunological functions properly, T cells must reliably distinguish between foreign (i.e., stimulatory) and self (i.e., non-stimulatory) ligands, even if foreign ligands are buried in a large pool of self ligands. Several models exist in which the off-rate of the ligand-TCR interaction plays a key role in this discrimination (Altan-Bonnet and Germain, 2005; Chakraborty and Weiss, 2014; Dushek et al., 2011; Lever et al., 2016; McKeithan, 1995; Rabinowitz et al., 1996), and the underlying mechanisms are commonly referred to as kinetic proofreading (KPR). Although these models differ in the level of detail by which intracellular processes are accounted for, they share the property that downstream signaling is only initiated if the TCR can complete all processes the KPR mechanism comprises. For this to be accomplished, the ligand-TCR complex must sustain a TCR conformation/arrangement (Gil et al., 2002; Martínez-Martín et al., 2009; Swamy et al., 2016) that triggers the KPR processes sufficiently long; premature decay of this active TCR conformation leads to an instant reversion of all KPR modifications acquired so far. Thus, the KPR time τKPR sets a threshold for the half-life of the active TCR conformation τactive. It is this common aspect of the different KPR mechanisms that is the subject of interest in this work.

To quantify the effect of KPR on signal initiation, we take the probability of completing all KPR processes, αKPR, to be a strictly increasing function of τactive that assumes its mid-value 0.5 if τactive = τKPR. A convenient choice for such a function is given by

(20) αKPR(τactive)=2τKPR/τactive,

for which αKPR → 1 if τactive >> τKPR, and αKPR → 0 if τactive << τKPR. Note that αKPR = 1 if τKPR = 0, which reflects the absence of a KPR mechanism, because in this case the active TCR conformation initiates downstream signaling instantly.

The relation between the half-life of the active TCR conformation and the off-rate of the ligand-TCR interaction, koff, and its half-life τD = ln(2)/koff, depends on the way the TCR is stimulated. In the simplest case, ligands bind TCRs monovalently with this complex being already the active conformation (this might be the case with membrane-bound ligands). Then, τactive = τD. However, the experimental setup used in this work requires cross-linking of TCRs, i.e., bivalent binding of the soluble ligand (Figure 7—figure supplement 2D), for inducing TCR signaling and thus establishing the active TCR conformation. Because the active TCR conformation of two cross-linked TCRs decays if one of the two subunits dissociates, see Equation (15c), the half-life of the active TCR conformation is given by

(21) τactive(I)=ln(2)2 qoff*(I) ,

where Equation (16b) has been used. Note that Equation (21) is specific for soluble ligands and might assume a different form if ligands are membrane- or surface-bound.

Example: Kinetic proofreading as proposed by McKeithan

To illustrate how an expression of the form Equation (20) arises in a KPR mechanism, we use the model proposed by McKeithan as an example (McKeithan, 1995). In this version receptors assuming an active TCR conformation are subject to sequential modifications each taking place with identical rates kp (Figure 7—figure supplement 1A). Downstream signaling is initiated only if n modifications are completed. However, if the active TCR conformation decays at any stage with rate kdec, all modifications acquired so far are lost rapidly.

The half-life of the active TCR conformation is given by τactive = ln(2)/kdec, and the time to acquire a single modification by τp = 1/kp. Since n modifications are required for signaling, the average time from forming the active TCR conformation to establishing a signal is τKPR = n τp (Figure 7—figure supplement 1A). The steady-state fraction of receptors in the active TCR conformation exhibiting all n modifications is then given by

(22) αn(τactive)=(τactiveτactive+ln(2)nτKPR)n.

We consider the case n >> 1, since the number of KPR processes involved in signal initiation is typically considered to be rather large. This gives

(23) αn(τactive)(1ln(2)τKPRnτactive)n.

In the limit of infinitely many modification steps, the KPR term becomes

(24) ατactive=2-τKPR/τactive,

in agreement with Equation (20). The KPR terms of McKeithan’s version for different values of n are shown in Figure 7—figure supplement 1B. The similarities between the curves shows that Equation (24) provides a good description independent of n.

Determining the PhyB conversion dynamics

Prior to the exposure of the PhyB ligands to the T cells, nearly all PhyB subunits were initially in the OFF state, and the PhyB ligands were illuminated with a certain intensity of light of 660 nm wavelength to convert PhyB subunits to the ON state. This process is described by Equations (13). For the binding and calcium measurements (Figure 7—figure supplements 4 and Figure 6D), the duration of pre-illumination was chosen sufficiently long to reach equilibrium as given by Equations (14). From the data at I = 0 of these calcium measurements, we can infer the relation between the calcium signal and the corresponding concentrations of the different PhyB forms in darkness, i.e., we consider Equations (18) and Equations (19a) for I = 0. Stopping the pre-illumination with intensity I at some time point Tstop before the equilibrium of PhyB conversion was reached trapped the concentrations of the different PhyB forms in a state that is described by Equations (13) evaluated at Tstop and intensity I. The corresponding calcium response was again described by Equations (18) and Equations (19a) for I = 0 (because we switched to darkness after pre-illumination), but this time the PhyB concentrations did not assume their equilibrium values, Equations (13). We can thus deduce the relation between Tstop and the concentrations of the different PhyB forms for intensity I. Using different time points revealed the kinetics of PhyB conversion at the given intensity allowing for inferring the corresponding value of the conversion rate ki. Repeating the protocol for a different intensity gives the same result but with changed rate ki according to Equation (1b). Importantly, these results do not depend on the total PhyB concentration. This was indeed found experimentally (Figure 8B) and thus used to determine the conversion rates.

T cell activation and model fitting

The central question of this work is whether T cells exploit a KPR mechanism. As shown above, the principal parameter of the KPR mechanism is its duration τKPR, with τKPR = 0 corresponding to no KPR mechanism being present. The active TCR conformation, which triggers a potential KPR mechanism and ultimately initiates downstream signaling, is given by TCRs bivalently bound by PhyB tetramers, i.e., cross-linked TCRs. The calcium response is thus taken to be proportional to the number of cross-linked TCRs,

(25) Ca2+PON,P2,I ~ αKPRτactiveIyX-LinkPON,P2,I .

The KPR term is given by Equation (20). The half-life of the active TCR conformation appearing in the KPR term of relation Equation (20) is given by Equation (21). The cross-link term is determined by Equations (18) and Equations (19a), and binding is described by Equations (18) and Equations (19b). The total amount of PhyB in the ON state, PON, and the concentration of PhyB with both PhyB molecules in the ON state, P2, are either determined by Equations (13) or by Equations (14), depending on whether PhyB had been pre-illuminated with short pulses of 660 nm light to reveal the PhyB conversion kinetics (Figure 8A and B) or with an extended pulse to establish the PhyB equilibrium partition.

For the choice of the independent model parameters, it is convenient to re-define the conversion rate ki, Equation (1b), by

(26) kiI= koffI/I0 .

The parameter I0 is the intensity at which the conversion rate ki equals koff. We further define τD = ln(2)/koff, the half-life of the PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complex in darkness, and γoff = qoff/koff to quantify how distinct the off-rates, given by Equation (16), are. With these definitions, the set of independent model parameters used for fitting is given in the following table:

ParameterUnitDescription
KD = koff/konnMDissociation constant of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complex (darkness)
Q = qon/qoffAssociation constant of multivalent binding step (darkness)
τD,PhyB = ln(2)/koffsHalf-life of PhyB ON-PIF-TCR complex (darkness)
γoff = qoff/koffDistinction of off-rates of mono- and multivalent dissociation
I0Intensity at which ki = koff
τKPRsDuration of KPR mechanism (=threshold half-life of the ligand-TCR interaction)

We fitted the models to the data using the maximum likelihood principle. For the binding data we used the estimated standard errors as obtained from the data. For the calcium signal we assumed an error model with a common coefficient of variation for all calcium data. All data (binding + all calcium measurements) were fitted simultaneously, providing a sufficiently large sample size (in total 130 data points).

To answer the question whether T cells exploit a KPR mechanism, we tested the hypothesis τKPR = 0 against τKPR > 0 by fitting the corresponding model to the data. Both fits were performed assuming γoff = 1, i.e., we assumed that both off-rates were identical. A likelihood ration test revealed strong support for the alternative hypothesis τKPR > 0 (p<10−6, Figure 7D), showing the necessity to include a KPR mechanism in order to explain the data (Figures 7E,F and 8B).

To this end, we assumed γoff = 1. Because distinct off-rates imply a distinct dependence of the affinities Equation (17) on the intensity I, demanding γoff = 1 if no KPR mechanism is considered might be too restrictive for explaining the data (if γoff ≠ 1 were actually the case), and a KPR mechanism could falsely be inferred. To avoid such a false-positive, we also considered the case γoff ≠ 1 without a KPR mechanism. This additional degree of freedom, however, lead to no improvement of the fit (Figure 7—figure supplement 5), which we take as further support for the existence of a KPR mechanism.

The parameter uncertainties of the model (τKPR > 0 and γoff = 1), expressed as 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs), were computed using the profile likelihood method (Murphy and Van Der Vaart, 2000; Venzon and Moolgavkar, 1988). All parameters were identifiable, i.e., have an upper and lower bound (Figure 8—figure supplement 1). This shows that the data were highly informative on the parameter values. The best-fit values and the lower and upper bounds of the 95% CIs are given in the table below:

Parameter [unit]Best-fit valueLower boundUpper bound
KD [nM]221046
Q11623
τD,PhyB [s]4015150
I0 [% of max]213.5
τKPR [s]8319

A central assumption made in this study is that the modifications of the KPR mechanism are quickly removed upon dissociation. However, fast rebinding of the just dissociated ligand effectively increases the half-life sensed by a KPR mechanism (Aleksic et al., 2010; Govern et al., 2010). Following the arguments in Govern et al. (2010), we calculate the expected number of rebindings in our system. The binding state triggering KPR in our model is two TCRs cross-linked by PhyB tetramers. Thus, if one TCR dissociates from PhyB, the other TCR remains bound and both TCRs become subject to complete modification removal unless quick rebinding occurs. Assuming the diffusivities of TCR and PhyB-bound TCR to be the same, the average number of rebindings, N*, is given by (see Equation (3) in Govern et al., 2010),

(27) N*=qon4π DTCR ,

with DTCR to diffusivity of TCRs. Using the best-fit value qon = 0.19 s−1 and the values given in Govern et al. (2010) for the TCR diffusivity and TCR density, we find N*=0.02. This shows that rebinding can be neglected in our system.

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475.061

Data availability

All data that were analyzed with the mathematical model are provided in source data files.

References

    1. Kersh GJ
    2. Kersh EN
    3. Fremont DH
    4. Allen PM
    (1998)
    High- and low-potency ligands with similar affinities for the TCR: the importance of kinetics in TCR signaling
    Immunity 9:817–826.
    1. Lin JJY
    2. Low-Nam ST
    3. Alfieri KN
    4. McAffee DB
    5. Fay NC
    6. Groves JT
    (2019)
    Mapping the stochastic sequence of individual ligand-receptor binding events to cellular activation: t cells act on the rare events
    Science Signaling 12:.
  1. Book
    1. Mancinelli AL
    (1994)
    The physiology of phytochrome action
    In: Kendrick R. E, Kronenberg G. M. H, editors. Photomorphogenesis in Plants. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 211–269.
    1. Murphy SA
    2. Van Der Vaart AW
    (2000) On profile likelihood
    Journal of the American Statistical Association 95:449–465.
    https://doi.org/10.1080/01621459.2000.10474219

Article and author information

Author details

  1. O Sascha Yousefi

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    3. Spemann Graduate School of Biology and Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Validation, Investigation, Visualization, Methodology, Writing—original draft, Writing—review and editing
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0001-5304-729X
  2. Matthias Günther

    1. Division of Theoretical Systems Biology, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany
    2. BioQuant Center, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
    Contribution
    Software, Formal analysis, Visualization, Methodology, Writing—original draft, Writing—review and editing
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0001-8077-8194
  3. Maximilian Hörner

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Resources, Investigation, Writing—review and editing
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-1743-9581
  4. Julia Chalupsky

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    3. Center for Chronic Immunodeficiency, Medical Center Freiburg and Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Investigation
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  5. Maximilian Wess

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Investigation
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  6. Simon M Brandl

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Investigation
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  7. Robert W Smith

    Laboratory of Systems and Synthetic Biology, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands
    Contribution
    Methodology
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0001-9657-7477
  8. Christian Fleck

    Laboratory of Systems and Synthetic Biology, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands
    Contribution
    Methodology
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  9. Tim Kunkel

    Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Methodology
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  10. Matias D Zurbriggen

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    3. Institute of Synthetic Biology and Cluster of Excellence on Plant Sciences, University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany
    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Methodology
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  11. Thomas Höfer

    1. Division of Theoretical Systems Biology, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany
    2. BioQuant Center, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Supervision, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Writing—review and editing
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  12. Wilfried Weber

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Resources, Methodology
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
  13. Wolfgang WA Schamel

    1. Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    2. Faculty of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
    3. Laboratory of Systems and Synthetic Biology, Wageningen University and Research, Wageningen, Netherlands
    Contribution
    Conceptualization, Supervision, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Writing—original draft, Project administration, Writing—review and editing
    For correspondence
    wolfgang.schamel@biologie.uni-freiburg.de
    Competing interests
    No competing interests declared
    ORCID icon "This ORCID iD identifies the author of this article:" 0000-0003-4496-3100

Funding

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (EXC2189)

  • O Sascha Yousefi
  • Maximilian Hörner

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (GSC-4)

  • Matias D Zurbriggen
  • Wilfried Weber

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (EXC294)

  • Thomas Höfer

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (EXC81)

  • Wolfgang WA Schamel

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (INST 39/899-1 FUGG)

  • Wolfgang WA Schamel

The funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication.

Acknowledgements

We thank Susana Minguet for discussions and reading of the manuscript, Susan Lauw and Johannes Kaiser from the BIOSS toolbox for running of the robotic platform (INST 39/899–1 FUGG) to conduct the calcium experiments, and Opto Biolabs for their customized illumination devices. This work was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) under Germany's Excellence Strategy through EXC294 (BIOSS - Center for Biological Signalling Studies), and EXC2189 (CIBSS – Centre for Integrative Biological Signalling Studies, Project ID 390939984) and GSC-4 (Spemann Graduate School, OSY and MH). TH is a member of CellNetworks.

Copyright

© 2019, Yousefi et al.

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.

Metrics

  • 7,517
    views
  • 1,144
    downloads
  • 91
    citations

Views, downloads and citations are aggregated across all versions of this paper published by eLife.

Download links

A two-part list of links to download the article, or parts of the article, in various formats.

Downloads (link to download the article as PDF)

Open citations (links to open the citations from this article in various online reference manager services)

Cite this article (links to download the citations from this article in formats compatible with various reference manager tools)

  1. O Sascha Yousefi
  2. Matthias Günther
  3. Maximilian Hörner
  4. Julia Chalupsky
  5. Maximilian Wess
  6. Simon M Brandl
  7. Robert W Smith
  8. Christian Fleck
  9. Tim Kunkel
  10. Matias D Zurbriggen
  11. Thomas Höfer
  12. Wilfried Weber
  13. Wolfgang WA Schamel
(2019)
Optogenetic control shows that kinetic proofreading regulates the activity of the T cell receptor
eLife 8:e42475.
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475

Share this article

https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.42475

Further reading

    1. Genetics and Genomics
    2. Immunology and Inflammation
    Stephanie Guillet, Tomi Lazarov ... Frédéric Geissmann
    Research Article

    Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease, the pathophysiology and genetic basis of which are incompletely understood. Using a forward genetic screen in multiplex families with SLE, we identified an association between SLE and compound heterozygous deleterious variants in the non-receptor tyrosine kinases (NRTKs) ACK1 and BRK. Experimental blockade of ACK1 or BRK increased circulating autoantibodies in vivo in mice and exacerbated glomerular IgG deposits in an SLE mouse model. Mechanistically, NRTKs regulate activation, migration, and proliferation of immune cells. We found that the patients’ ACK1 and BRK variants impair efferocytosis, the MERTK-mediated anti-inflammatory response to apoptotic cells, in human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived macrophages, which may contribute to SLE pathogenesis. Overall, our data suggest that ACK1 and BRK deficiencies are associated with human SLE and impair efferocytosis in macrophages.

    1. Immunology and Inflammation
    Hong Yu, Hiroshi Nishio ... Drew Pardoll
    Research Article

    The adaptive T cell response is accompanied by continuous rewiring of the T cell’s electric and metabolic state. Ion channels and nutrient transporters integrate bioelectric and biochemical signals from the environment, setting cellular electric and metabolic states. Divergent electric and metabolic states contribute to T cell immunity or tolerance. Here, we report in mice that neuritin (Nrn1) contributes to tolerance development by modulating regulatory and effector T cell function. Nrn1 expression in regulatory T cells promotes its expansion and suppression function, while expression in the T effector cell dampens its inflammatory response. Nrn1 deficiency in mice causes dysregulation of ion channel and nutrient transporter expression in Treg and effector T cells, resulting in divergent metabolic outcomes and impacting autoimmune disease progression and recovery. These findings identify a novel immune function of the neurotrophic factor Nrn1 in regulating the T cell metabolic state in a cell context-dependent manner and modulating the outcome of an immune response.