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The γδTCR combines innate immunity with adaptive immunity by utilizing spatially distinct regions for agonist selection and antigen responsiveness

The γδTCR combines innate immunity with adaptive immunity by utilizing spatially distinct regions for agonist selection and antigen responsiveness
The γδTCR combines innate immunity with adaptive immunity by utilizing spatially distinct regions for agonist selection and antigen responsiveness

T lymphocytes expressing γδ T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) comprise evolutionarily conserved cells with paradoxical features. On the one hand, clonally expanded γδ T cells with unique specificities typify adaptive immunity. Conversely, large compartments of γδTCR+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (γδ IELs) exhibit limited TCR diversity and effect rapid, innate-like tissue surveillance. The development of several γδ IEL compartments depends on epithelial expression of genes encoding butyrophilin-like (Btnl (mouse) or BTNL (human)) members of the B7 superfamily of T cell co-stimulators. Here we found that responsiveness to Btnl or BTNL proteins was mediated by germline-encoded motifs within the cognate TCR variable γ-chains (Vγ chains) of mouse and human γδ IELs. This was in contrast to diverse antigen recognition by clonally restricted complementarity-determining regions CDR1-CDR3 of the same γδTCRs. Hence, the γδTCR intrinsically combines innate immunity and adaptive immunity by using spatially distinct regions to discriminate non-clonal agonist-selecting elements from clone-specific ligands. The broader implications for antigen-receptor biology are considered.

Journal Article
1529-2908
1352–1365
Melandri, Daisy
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Zlatareva, Iva
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Chaleil, Raphaël A G
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Dart, Robin J.
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Chancellor, Andrew
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Nussbaumer, Oliver
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Polyakova, Oxana
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Roberts, Natalie A.
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Wesch, Daniela
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Kabelitz, Dieter
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Irving, Peter M.
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John, Susan
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Mansour, Salah
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Bates, Paul A.
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Vantourout, Pierre
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Hayday, Adrian C.
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Melandri, Daisy
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Zlatareva, Iva
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Chaleil, Raphaël A G
39336046-3e75-4386-a77a-5a91e70a9457
Dart, Robin J.
3e03616a-238d-4242-8d3c-bfc50357b02e
Chancellor, Andrew
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Nussbaumer, Oliver
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Polyakova, Oxana
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Roberts, Natalie A.
88167402-7d7e-4849-8375-fa30035c3dee
Wesch, Daniela
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Kabelitz, Dieter
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Irving, Peter M.
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John, Susan
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Mansour, Salah
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Bates, Paul A.
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Vantourout, Pierre
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Hayday, Adrian C.
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Melandri, Daisy, Zlatareva, Iva, Chaleil, Raphaël A G, Dart, Robin J., Chancellor, Andrew, Nussbaumer, Oliver, Polyakova, Oxana, Roberts, Natalie A., Wesch, Daniela, Kabelitz, Dieter, Irving, Peter M., John, Susan, Mansour, Salah, Bates, Paul A., Vantourout, Pierre and Hayday, Adrian C. (2018) The γδTCR combines innate immunity with adaptive immunity by utilizing spatially distinct regions for agonist selection and antigen responsiveness. Nature Immunology, 19 (12), 1352–1365. (doi:10.1038/s41590-018-0253-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

T lymphocytes expressing γδ T cell antigen receptors (TCRs) comprise evolutionarily conserved cells with paradoxical features. On the one hand, clonally expanded γδ T cells with unique specificities typify adaptive immunity. Conversely, large compartments of γδTCR+ intraepithelial lymphocytes (γδ IELs) exhibit limited TCR diversity and effect rapid, innate-like tissue surveillance. The development of several γδ IEL compartments depends on epithelial expression of genes encoding butyrophilin-like (Btnl (mouse) or BTNL (human)) members of the B7 superfamily of T cell co-stimulators. Here we found that responsiveness to Btnl or BTNL proteins was mediated by germline-encoded motifs within the cognate TCR variable γ-chains (Vγ chains) of mouse and human γδ IELs. This was in contrast to diverse antigen recognition by clonally restricted complementarity-determining regions CDR1-CDR3 of the same γδTCRs. Hence, the γδTCR intrinsically combines innate immunity and adaptive immunity by using spatially distinct regions to discriminate non-clonal agonist-selecting elements from clone-specific ligands. The broader implications for antigen-receptor biology are considered.

Text
Melandi, Zlatareva et al Nat Immunol 2018 [author version] - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 October 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 November 2018
Published date: December 2018
Keywords: Journal Article

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 426240
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/426240
ISSN: 1529-2908
PURE UUID: 4ce3c964-9428-4123-b69c-d7459d1006cd
ORCID for Salah Mansour: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5982-734X

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:17

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Contributors

Author: Daisy Melandri
Author: Iva Zlatareva
Author: Raphaël A G Chaleil
Author: Robin J. Dart
Author: Andrew Chancellor
Author: Oliver Nussbaumer
Author: Oxana Polyakova
Author: Natalie A. Roberts
Author: Daniela Wesch
Author: Dieter Kabelitz
Author: Peter M. Irving
Author: Susan John
Author: Salah Mansour ORCID iD
Author: Paul A. Bates
Author: Pierre Vantourout
Author: Adrian C. Hayday

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