|
|
|
...read
the wave™
Nano
Research...Nano-Forschung
Nano Onderzoek
www.nanotsunami.com
|
Scientists
Create a New Way to Study T Cell Signaling

Jay Groves, a Berkeley Lab/UC Berkeley chemist,
led the development of synthetic membranes that can
interact with living T cells to enable scientists
to control critical signaling activity in the immune
system
|
| |
BERKELEY,
CA – An experiment that began as a “fantasy pipe
dream” just three years ago is now a reality. Researchers
with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley
Lab) and the University of California at Berkeley,
combining nanotechnology with biochemistry, have
created unique synthetic membranes that, for the
first time ever, enable them to directly control
signaling activity in living T cells from the immune
system. Already their experiments have yielded
surprising results.
“This marriage of inorganic nanotechnology with
organic molecules and cells enables us to go inside
a living cell and physically move around its signaling
molecules with molecular precision,” said Jay Groves,
a chemist who holds a joint appointment with Berkeley
Lab's Physical Biosciences Division and UC Berkeley's
Chemistry Department. “Our experimental beaker has
now become the inside of living cells and we can
watch chemical reactions take place there.”
Groves
is the principal co-author, along with Michael
Dustin, a cellular immunologist at New York University
(NYU), of a paper published in the November 18, 2005
issue of the journal Science , entitled: “Altered
TCR Signaling from Geometrically Repatterned Immunological
Synapses.” The lead author is Kaspar Mossman, a graduate
student in Groves' research group, and the second
co-author is Gabriele Campi, a graduate student at
NYU with Dustin.
“Scientists, including ourselves, have been posing
elaborate theories about how the strength and duration
of signals that activate T cells are controlled by
immunological synapses, without having been able
to do direct experimentation of key factors,” said
Groves. “Three years ago, we had this fantasy pipe
dream about an experiment to measure how alterations
in the geometric shapes of the synapses – what we
call spatial mutations – would affect T cell signaling.
Then we realized, we have the tools to create nanoscale
patterns, we can do this.”
|

These fluorescently labeled electron micrographs
show immunological synapses formed by T cell receptors
(green) and adhesion molecules (red). Image (A) shows
the synapse in its natural bull's eye shape; in image
(B) chromium lines were used to pattern the synapse
with parallel lines; (C) the synapse was patterned
into a square grid; and (D), the synapse was patterned
into concentric hexagons.
|
The
human immune system is a remarkable collaboration
of different types of cells, working together to
protect our bodies from bacterial, parasitic, fungal
or viral infections, and against the growth of tumors.
The process starts when “antigens,” special markers
on the surface of a cell, identify another cell as “non-self,” and
signal the cellular warriors of the immune system
to kill the invader. Leading this attack will be
the T cells, lymphocytes from the thymus. It is well
established that the key to T cell activation is
the molecular signal coming off antigen-presenting
cell surfaces. This signal must be enhanced and sustained
long enough for the T cells to commit to mounting
an immune response, and then must be cut off in time
to avoid antigen-induced cell suicide or “apoptosis” of
the T cells.
It
has also been established that the control center
for T cell signaling is at the junction or point
of contact between T cells and antigens, dubbed
the “immunological
synapse” because it resembles the synapse between
two communicating nerve cells. At the immunological
synapse, a central cluster of T cell receptors surrounded
by a ring of adhesion molecules form what co-author
Dustin has described as a sort of “bull's-eye.” The
center of this bull's eye has been dubbed the “central
supramolecular activation cluster,” or c-SMAC, because
it was believed to be the source of T cell activation.
“The original idea behind the c-SMAC was that the
larger the T cell receptor cluster, the stronger
the T cell activation signal,” said Groves. “This
simple vision of strength in numbers had begun to
show cracks, and now we have demonstrated that just
the opposite is true, the coalescence of the c-SMAC
cluster extinguishes the T cell activation signal.
The duration of the activation signal is related
to the spatial organization of the T cell receptors
rather than cluster size.”
Groves and his colleagues constructed their synthetic
membranes out of lipids which they assembled onto
a substrate of solid silica so that the membranes
were able to float freely a few nanometers above
the substrate. This enabled the researchers to preserve
the membranes in their naturally fluid state, allowing
lipids and T cell receptor proteins to diffuse and
interact freely over macroscopic distances.
“The fluidity of our membranes created artificial
antigen-presenting cell surfaces that enabled the
formation of functional immunological synapses with
living T cells,” said Groves. |

This watercolor painting by Raghuveer Parthasarathy,
a member of Jay Groves research group, shows a hybrid
interface between a living T cell and a synthetic
membrane on a substrate that has been patterned with
chromium lines. T cell receptors (TCRs) are communicating
with their corresponding signaling ligands on the
membrane. By controlling the spatial arrangements
of the signaling ligands, scientists can control
the T cell's overall response.
|
Groves
and his colleagues were able to spatially mutate
the geometric shapes of the immunological synapses
by embedding the silica substrate with chrome lines
that were only 100 nanometers (about one ten-millionth
of an inch) wide. These ultra-narrow chrome lines
served as barriers that restricted the motion of
membrane lipids and T cell receptor proteins. Using
electron-beam lithography, the researchers were able
to configure the chrome lines into several distinct
patterns, including simple parallel lines, grids,
and a series of concentric hexagons.
“By changing the shape of the immunological synapse,
we showed that the synapse signal starts out in an
amplified mode, and that the transport of the T cell
receptors towards the center weakens and eventually
extinguishes the signal, irrespective of the degree
of clustering,” Groves said. “This may help explain
why diseases of the autoimmune system are so difficult
to treat. T cell receptor proteins do not respond
like a conventional target, where if you hit the
bull's eye you trigger a signal. The spatial position
of the receptor determines the type of signal it
triggers.”
If scientists can learn more about the impact that
spatial arrangement has on the immunological synapse
and its signaling strength, the information could
benefit the future development of drugs for treating
autoimmune diseases. Such information should also
help scientists better understand the chemical language
by which cells communicate with one another.
Groves said this new technique for spatial mutation
studies should be applicable to many intercellular
signaling systems. Already, he and his colleagues
have begun applying it to study neuronal synapse
formation, and cell signaling mechanisms in the development
of cancer. They are also using it to look at the
dynamic range of signaling over which T cell receptors
can respond.
“Essentially, these experiments amount to using
inorganic nanotechnology to physically grab a protein
in a living cell and move it to another position
in that cell – then watch how the cell responds,” said
Groves. “We used it to study the T cell as a paradigm
system, but the theme here is much more general.
Whereas the spatial position of molecules is rarely
thought to play an important role in the outcome
of a chemical reaction, with our experimental technique
we are seeing that, in living cells, this is not
the case. The spatial position encodes information
which can be directly translated into altered chemical
outcomes.”
The
earliest indications that spatial positions could
influence T cell signaling and that the synaptic
pattern might actually help to extinguish the signal
came from the work of Arup Chakraborty, a chemical
engineering professor who, at the time, held a
joint Berkeley Lab/UC Berkeley appointment and
is now with MIT University. Chakraborty is a pioneer
in the use of computer simulations, called “experiments in silico,” for
studying important problems in cellular immunology.
In 2003, his computational models indicated that
the immunological synapse is responsible for intense
but self-limited T cell signaling.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of Energy national
laboratory located in Berkeley, California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research and is managed by
the University of California. Visit our Website at www.lbl.gov .
Additional Information
Contact: Lynn Yarris (510-486-5375), lcyarris@lbl.gov |
|
This
story has been adapted from a news release -
Diese Meldung basiert auf einer Pressemitteilung -
Deze
tekst is gebaseerd op een nieuwsbericht - |
|
|
|
|

who
is reading
the wave ?
|
missed
some news ?
click on archive photo
|
or
how about joining us
|
or
contacting us ?
|
about
us
|
our
mission
|
|
| |
| |
|