Antigen Potency and Maximal Efficacy Reveal a Mechanism of Efficient T Antigen Potency and Maximal Efficacy Reveal a Mechanism of Efficient T Cell Activation

Abstract

The following resources related to this article are available online at http://stke.sciencemag.org. Article Tools http://stke.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/sigtrans;4/176/ra39 Visit the online version of this article to access the personalization and article tools: T cell activation, a critical event in adaptive immune responses, depends on productive interactions between T cell receptors (TCRs) and antigens presented as peptide-bound major histocompatibility complexes (pMHCs). Activated T cells lyse infected cells, secrete cytokines, and perform other effector functions with various efficiencies, which depend on the binding parameters of the TCR-pMHC complex. The mechanism through which binding parameters are translated to the efficiency of T cell activation, however, remains controversial. The "affinity model" suggests that the dissociation constant (K D ) of the TCR-pMHC complex determines the response, whereas the "productive hit rate model" suggests that the off-rate (k off ) is critical. Here, we used mathematical modeling to show that antigen potency, as determined by the EC 50 (half-maximal effective concentration), which is used to support K D -based models, could not discriminate between the affinity and the productive hit rate models. Both models predicted a correlation between EC 50 and K D , but only the productive hit rate model predicted a correlation between maximal efficacy (E max ), the maximal T cell response induced by pMHC, and k off . We confirmed the predictions made by the productive hit rate model in experiments with cytotoxic T cell clones and a panel of pMHC variants. Thus, we propose that the activity of an antigen is determined by both its potency (EC 50 ) and maximal efficacy (E max ). Material

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