Abstract

Cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) bind to peptides presented by MHC I (pMHC) through T cell receptors of various affinities. Low-affinity CTLs are important for the control of intracellular pathogens and cancers; however, the mechanisms by which these lower affinity CTLs are activated and maintained are not well understood. We recently discovered that fully activated CTLs stimulated by strong-affinity peptides in the presence of IL-12 are able to secrete exosomes that, in turn, stimulate bystander CTLs without requiring the presence of antigen. We hypothesized that exosomes secreted by high-affinity CTLs could strengthen the activation of low-affinity CTLs. Naive OT-I CD8+ cells were stimulated with altered N4 peptides of different affinities in the presence or absence of Exo. The presence of Exo preferentially increased cell proliferation and enhanced the production of IFNγ in CTLs stimulated by low-affinity peptides. The expression of granzyme B (GZB) was augmented in all affinities, with higher GZB production in low-affinity stimulated CTLs than in high-affinity stimulated ones. Exosomes promoted the rapid activation of low-affinity CTLs, which remained responsive to exosomes for a prolonged duration. Unexpectedly, exosomes could be induced quickly (24 h) following CTL activation and at a higher quantity per cell than later (72 h). While exosome protein profiles vary significantly between early exosomes and their later-derived counterparts, both appear to have similar downstream functions. These results reveal a potential mechanism for fully activated CTLs in activating lower-affinity CTLs that may have important implications in boosting the function of low-affinity CTLs in immunotherapy for cancers and chronic viral infections.

Highlights

  • Single positive CD4+ or CD8+ T cells mature in and migrate from the thymus following positive and negative selection to ensure this T cell pool remains self-restricted and non-autoaggressive [1, 2]

  • Peptide/T cell receptor (TCR) affinity is the main contributor to CTL responses, so we first tested the effects of CTL-derived exosomes on OT-I cells stimulated by peptides of different affinities

  • Lowaffinity peptides alone were able to drive the proliferation of naive CTLs, albeit at a slower rate (Figure 1A), consistent with previous reports [6, 13, 48]

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Summary

Introduction

Single positive CD4+ or CD8+ T cells mature in and migrate from the thymus following positive and negative selection to ensure this T cell pool remains self-restricted and non-autoaggressive [1, 2]. Most CTLs (CD8+ T cells) are low-affinity [8, 9], but high-affinity CTLs are considered more essential to the immune response due to their more robust function and increased sensitivity to detection [10,11,12]. The presence of CTLs with diverse affinities has been confirmed throughout the immune response [13, 14] via improved, more sensitive assays for detecting low-affinity CTLs [15,16,17]. Memory low-affinity CTLs are induced and maintained during infection [12, 26, 27] and can mount a robust recall response [28]. How this low-affinity CTL response is initiated and maintained, is not wellunderstood [12, 27]

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