1. Polysaccharide A from the capsule of Bacteroides fragilis induces clonal CD4+ T cell expansion.
- Author
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Johnson JL, Jones MB, and Cobb BA
- Subjects
- Animals, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes cytology, Complementarity Determining Regions immunology, Immunologic Memory drug effects, Mice, Polysaccharides, Bacterial chemistry, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, alpha-beta immunology, Bacterial Capsules chemistry, Bacteroides fragilis chemistry, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Lymphocyte Activation drug effects, Polysaccharides, Bacterial pharmacology
- Abstract
For 3 decades, the view of MHCII-dependent antigen presentation has been completely dominated by peptide antigens despite our 2004 discovery in which MHCII was shown to present processed fragments of zwitterionic capsular polysaccharides to T cells. Published findings further demonstrate that polysaccharide A (PSA) from the capsule of Bacteroides fragilis is a potent activator of CD4(+) T cells and that these T cells have important biological functions, especially in the maintenance of immunological homeostasis. However, little is known about the nature of T cell recognition of the polysaccharide-MHCII complex or the phenotype of the resulting activated cells. Here, we use next-generation sequencing of the αβT cell receptor of CD4(+) T cells from mice stimulated with PSA in comparison with protein antigen simulation and non-immunized controls and found that PSA immunization induced clonal expansion of a small subset of suppressive CD4(+)CD45RB(low) effector/memory T cells. Moreover, the sequences of the complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) loop from top clones indicate a lack of specific variable β and joining region use and average CDR3 loop length. There was also a preference for a zwitterionic motif within the CDR3 loop sequences, aligning well with the known requirement for a similar motif within PSA to enable T cell activation. These data support a model in which PSA, and possibly other T cell-dependent polysaccharide antigens, elicits a clonal and therefore specific CD4(+) T cell response often characterized by pairing dual-charged CDR3 loop sequences with dual-charged PSA., (© 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
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