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American Association of Immunologists, The Journal of Immunology, 9(191), p. 4499-4503, 2013

DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1301660

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Cutting Edge: CD1a Tetramers and Dextramers Identify Human Lipopeptide–Specific T Cells Ex Vivo

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Human CD1a mediates foreign antigen recognition by a T cell clone, but the nature of possible T cell receptor interactions with CD1a-lipid are unknown. After incubating CD1a with a mycobacterial lipopeptide antigen, dideoxymycobactin (DDM), we identified and measured binding to a recombinant TCR (TRAV3/ TRBV3-1, KD ≈ 100µM). Detection of ternary CD1a-lipid-TCR interactions enabled development of CD1a tetramers and CD1a multimers with carbohydrate backbones (dextramers), which specifically stained T cells using a mechanism that was dependent on the precise stereochemistry of the peptide backbone and was blocked with a soluble TCR. Further, sorting of human T cells from unrelated tuberculosis patients for bright DDM-dextramer staining allowed recovery of T cells that were activated by CD1a and DDM. These studies demonstrate that the mechanism of T cell activation by lipopeptides occurs via ternary interactions of CD1a-antigen-TCR. Further, these studies demonstrate the existence of lipopeptide specific T cells in humans ex vivo.