CD1a selectively captures endogenous cellular lipids that broadly block T cell response

Publication date

2021-05-07

Authors

Cotton, Rachel N
Wegrecki, Marcin
Cheng, Tan-Yun
Chen, Yi-SongISNI 0000000505985459
Veerapen, Natacha
Le Nours, Jérôme
Orgill, Dennis P
Pomahac, Bohdan
Talbot, Simon G
Willis, Richard

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_sa

Abstract

We optimized lipidomics methods to broadly detect endogenous lipids bound to cellular CD1a proteins. Whereas membrane phospholipids dominate in cells, CD1a preferentially captured sphingolipids, especially a C42, doubly unsaturated sphingomyelin (42:2 SM). The natural 42:2 SM but not the more common 34:1 SM blocked CD1a tetramer binding to T cells in all human subjects tested. Thus, cellular CD1a selectively captures a particular endogenous lipid that broadly blocks its binding to TCRs. Crystal structures show that the short cellular SMs stabilized a triad of surface residues to remain flush with CD1a, but the longer lipids forced the phosphocholine group to ride above the display platform to hinder TCR approach. Whereas nearly all models emphasize antigen-mediated T cell activation, we propose that the CD1a system has intrinsic autoreactivity and is negatively regulated by natural endogenous inhibitors selectively bound in its cleft. Further, the detailed chemical structures of natural blockers could guide future design of therapeutic blockers of CD1a response.

Keywords

General Medicine

Citation

Cotton, R N, Wegrecki, M, Cheng, T-Y, Chen, Y-L, Veerapen, N, Le Nours, J, Orgill, D P, Pomahac, B, Talbot, S G, Willis, R, Altman, J D, de Jong, A, Van Rhijn, I, Clark, R A, Besra, G S, Ogg, G, Rossjohn, J & Moody, D B 2021, 'CD1a selectively captures endogenous cellular lipids that broadly block T cell response', Journal of Experimental Medicine, vol. 218, no. 7, e20202699. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20202699