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Quantifying persistence in the T‐cell signaling network using an optically controllable antigen receptor

Michael J. Harris, Muna Fuyal, John R. James

2021Molecular Systems Biology28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

T cells discriminate between healthy and infected cells with remarkable sensitivity when mounting an immune response, which is hypothesized to depend on T cells combining stimuli from multiple antigen-presenting cell interactions into a more potent response. To quantify the capacity for T cells to accomplish this, we have developed an antigen receptor that is optically tunable within cell conjugates, providing control over the duration, and intensity of intracellular T-cell signaling. We observe limited persistence within the T-cell intracellular network on disruption of receptor input, with signals dissipating entirely in ~15 min, and directly show sustained proximal receptor signaling is required to maintain gene transcription. T cells thus primarily accumulate the outputs of gene expression rather than integrate discrete intracellular signals. Engineering optical control in a clinically relevant chimeric antigen receptor (CAR), we show that this limited signal persistence can be exploited to increase CAR-T cell activation threefold using pulsatile stimulation. Our results are likely to apply more generally to the signaling dynamics of other cellular networks.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyIntracellularChimeric antigen receptorCell biologyReceptorT-cell receptorAntigenSignal transductionT cellCellImmune systemImmunologyGeneticsCAR-T cell therapy researchT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyImmune Cell Function and Interaction