Litcius/Paper detail

Cell–cell interactions <i>via</i> non-covalent click chemistry

Chad Plumet, Achmet Said Mohamed, Tanguy Vendeuvre, Brigitte Renoux, Jonathan Clarhaut, Sébastien Papot

2021Chemical Science23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

bioorthogonal chemistry. By using this strategy, we functionalized the surface of tumor and T cells using complementary artificial markers based on both β-cyclodextrins (β-CDs) and adamantyl trimers, respectively. Once tied on cell surfaces, the artificial markers induced cell-cell adhesion through non-covalent click chemistry. These unnatural interactions between A459 lung tumor cells and Jurkat T cells triggered the activation of natural killer (NK) cells thanks to the increased production of interleukin-2 (IL-2) in the vicinity of cancer cells, leading ultimately to their cytolysis. The ready-to-use surface markers designed in this study can be easily inserted on the membrane of a wide range of cells previously submitted to metabolic glycoengineering, thereby offering a simple way to investigate and manipulate intercellular interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Bioorthogonal chemistryClick chemistryJurkat cellsCytolysisChemistryCellMembraneIntracellularBiochemistryCell biologyT cellIn vitroCytotoxicityBiologyCombinatorial chemistryImmunologyImmune systemClick Chemistry and ApplicationsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchCancer Research and Treatments