Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 290, Issue 8, 20 February 2015, Pages 5007-5014
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Immunology
Polysaccharide A from the Capsule of Bacteroides fragilis Induces Clonal CD4+ T Cell Expansion*Polysaccharide Induces Clonal T Cell Expansion

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.621771Get rights and content
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For 3 decades, the view of MHCII-dependent antigen presentation has been completely dominated by peptide antigens despite our 2004 discovery in which MHCII was shown to present processed fragments of zwitterionic capsular polysaccharides to T cells. Published findings further demonstrate that polysaccharide A (PSA) from the capsule of Bacteroides fragilis is a potent activator of CD4+ T cells and that these T cells have important biological functions, especially in the maintenance of immunological homeostasis. However, little is known about the nature of T cell recognition of the polysaccharide-MHCII complex or the phenotype of the resulting activated cells. Here, we use next-generation sequencing of the αβT cell receptor of CD4+ T cells from mice stimulated with PSA in comparison with protein antigen simulation and non-immunized controls and found that PSA immunization induced clonal expansion of a small subset of suppressive CD4+CD45RBlow effector/memory T cells. Moreover, the sequences of the complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) loop from top clones indicate a lack of specific variable β and joining region use and average CDR3 loop length. There was also a preference for a zwitterionic motif within the CDR3 loop sequences, aligning well with the known requirement for a similar motif within PSA to enable T cell activation. These data support a model in which PSA, and possibly other T cell-dependent polysaccharide antigens, elicits a clonal and therefore specific CD4+ T cell response often characterized by pairing dual-charged CDR3 loop sequences with dual-charged PSA.

Glycobiology
Immunology
Lymphocyte
Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC)
Polysaccharide

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This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants GM082916 and OD004225 (to B. A. C.). This work was also supported by American Asthma Foundation Grant 10-0187 (to B. A. C.).