scholarly journals Detection of Cell Surface Ligands for Human Synovial γδ T Cells

2019 ◽  
Vol 203 (9) ◽  
pp. 2369-2376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl Collins ◽  
Yuan Lui ◽  
Ana Mafalda Santos ◽  
Bryan A. Ballif ◽  
Anisha Mahalya Gogerly-Moragoda ◽  
...  
Immunology ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 92 (3) ◽  
pp. 340-345 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. D. MACHUGH ◽  
J. K. MBURU ◽  
M. J. CAROL ◽  
C. R. WYATT ◽  
J.A. ORDEN ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 27 (12) ◽  
pp. 3269-3282 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arkadiusz Miazek ◽  
Manfred Brockhaus ◽  
Hanno Langen ◽  
Andrea Braun ◽  
Pawel Kisielow

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shahan Mamoor

It remains unclear whether γδ T-cell fate is instructed or reinforced by the γδTCR. Prospective isolation of a multi-potent γδ cell progenitor (“the γδ stem cell”) and precisely assessing when the γδTCR is displayed in relation to developmental emergence of multi-lineage reconstitution could resolve this question but there is a lack of reliable cell surface markers for the γδ stem cell. The double-negative 3a stage (“DN3a”) is a critical intermediate cell-state during the transition from non-committed T-lymphocyte progenitor to mature γδ or 𝛂β T-cell, as γδTcr rearrangements and β-selection can theoretically temporally co-exist during this time in lymphocyte development. In this study I compared the transcriptomes of murine stage DN3a thymocytes to that of γδ T-cells (Tγδ) to illustrate the key transcriptional differences during this developmental transition. The analyses here revealed a series of cell surface markers, transcription factors, cytokine receptors, cell adhesion genes and non-coding RNA that represent some of the major transcriptional differences between γδ T-cells and the cells that they might arise from.


2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
David H Canaday ◽  
Karen E Parker ◽  
Htin Aung ◽  
Hui Emily Chen ◽  
Dariana Nunez-Medina ◽  
...  

2005 ◽  
Vol 79 (11) ◽  
pp. 7255-7261 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Kotsiopriftis ◽  
Jerome E. Tanner ◽  
Caroline Alfieri

ABSTRACT The aim of this study was to elucidate the in vitro response of γδ T cells to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-infected B cells and to determine whether EBV-induced heat shock proteins (HSPs) might serve as γδ T-cell stimulants. Cytofluorometric analysis revealed HSP90 cell surface expression in 12% of the EBV-immortalized B-cell population in all four of the B-cell lines tested. HSP27, HSP60, and HSP70 were not detected on the cell surface by cytofluorometry in these same B-cell lines. HSP90 and HSP60, but not HSP70 or HSP27, were detected on the cell surface after 125I cell surface labeling and immunoprecipitation with anti-human HSP monoclonal antibodies. In vitro kinetic studies indicated that γδ T cells increased at least twofold by day 11 postinfection in cultures of EBV-seronegative peripheral blood lymphocytes infected with EBV, whereas percentages of αβ T cells in these same cultures either decreased slightly or remained relatively unchanged in response to EBV infection. Addition of anti-human HSP90 monoclonal antibody to the EBV-infected lymphocyte cultures inhibited γδ T-cell expansion by 92%. The inhibition of γδ T-cell expansion by anti-HSP90 antibody was reversed upon treatment with exogenous HSP90. Taken together, these results indicate that HSP90 played an important role in the stimulation of γδ T cells during EBV infection of B cells in vitro and may serve as an important immunomodulator of γδ T cells during acute EBV infection.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandria Gillespie ◽  
Maria Gracia Gervasi ◽  
Thillainayagam Sathiyaseelan ◽  
Timothy Connelley ◽  
Janice C. Telfer ◽  
...  

The WC1 cell surface family of molecules function as hybrid gamma delta (γδ) TCR co-receptors, augmenting cellular responses when cross-linked with the TCR, and as pattern recognition receptors, binding pathogens. It is known that following activation, key tyrosines are phosphorylated in the intracytoplasmic domains of WC1 molecules and that the cells fail to respond when WC1 is knocked down or, as shown here, when physically separated from the TCR. Based on these results we hypothesized that the colocalization of WC1 and TCR will occur following cellular activation thereby allowing signaling to ensue. We evaluated the spatio-temporal dynamics of their interaction using imaging flow cytometry and stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy. We found that in quiescent γδ T cells both WC1 and TCR existed in separate and spatially stable protein domains (protein islands) but after activation using Leptospira, our model system, that they concatenated. The association between WC1 and TCR was close enough for fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Prior to concatenating with the WC1 co-receptor, γδ T cells had clustering of TCR-CD3 complexes and exclusion of CD45. γδ T cells may individually express more than one variant of the WC1 family of molecules and we found that individual WC1 variants are clustered in separate protein islands in quiescent cells. However, the islands containing different variants merged following cell activation and before merging with the TCR islands. While WC1 was previously shown to bind Leptospira in solution, here we showed that Leptospira bound WC1 proteins on the surface of γδ T cells and that this could be blocked by anti-WC1 antibodies. In conclusion, γδ TCR, WC1 and Leptospira interact directly on the γδ T cell surface, further supporting the role of WC1 in γδ T cell pathogen recognition and cellular activation.


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