TY - JOUR
T1 - Lipidomic scanning of self-lipids identifies headless antigens for natural killer T cells
AU - Cheng, Tan Yun
AU - Praveena, T.
AU - Govindarajan, Srinath
AU - Almeida, Catarina F.
AU - Pellicci, Daniel G.
AU - Arkins, Wellington C.
AU - Van Rhijn, Ildiko
AU - Venken, Koen
AU - Elewaut, Dirk
AU - Godfrey, Dale I.
AU - Rossjohn, Jamie
AU - Moody, D. Branch
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 the Author(s).
PY - 2024/8/20
Y1 - 2024/8/20
N2 - To broadly measure the spectrum of cellular self-antigens for natural killer T cells (NKT), we developed a sensitive lipidomics system to analyze lipids trapped between CD1d and NKT T cell receptors (TCRs). We captured diverse antigen complexes formed in cells from natural endogenous lipids, with or without inducing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. After separating protein complexes with no, low, or high CD1d–TCR interaction, we eluted lipids to establish the spectrum of self-lipids that facilitate this interaction. Although this unbiased approach identified fifteen molecules, they clustered into only two related groups: previously known phospholipid antigens and unexpected neutral lipid antigens. Mass spectrometry studies identified the neutral lipids as ceramides, deoxyceramides, and diacylglycerols, which can be considered headless lipids because they lack polar headgroups that usually form the TCR epitope. The crystal structure of the TCR–ceramide–CD1d complex showed how the missing headgroup allowed the TCR to predominantly contact CD1d, supporting a model of CD1d autoreactivity. Ceramide and related headless antigens mediated physiological TCR binding affinity, weak NKT cell responses, and tetramer binding to polyclonal human and mouse NKT cells. Ceramide and sphingomyelin are oppositely regulated components of the “sphingomyelin cycle” that are altered during apoptosis, transformation, and ER stress. Thus, the unique molecular link of ceramide to NKT cell response, along with the recent identification of sphingomyelin blockers of NKT cell activation, provide two mutually reinforcing links for NKT cell response to sterile cellular stress conditions.
AB - To broadly measure the spectrum of cellular self-antigens for natural killer T cells (NKT), we developed a sensitive lipidomics system to analyze lipids trapped between CD1d and NKT T cell receptors (TCRs). We captured diverse antigen complexes formed in cells from natural endogenous lipids, with or without inducing endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. After separating protein complexes with no, low, or high CD1d–TCR interaction, we eluted lipids to establish the spectrum of self-lipids that facilitate this interaction. Although this unbiased approach identified fifteen molecules, they clustered into only two related groups: previously known phospholipid antigens and unexpected neutral lipid antigens. Mass spectrometry studies identified the neutral lipids as ceramides, deoxyceramides, and diacylglycerols, which can be considered headless lipids because they lack polar headgroups that usually form the TCR epitope. The crystal structure of the TCR–ceramide–CD1d complex showed how the missing headgroup allowed the TCR to predominantly contact CD1d, supporting a model of CD1d autoreactivity. Ceramide and related headless antigens mediated physiological TCR binding affinity, weak NKT cell responses, and tetramer binding to polyclonal human and mouse NKT cells. Ceramide and sphingomyelin are oppositely regulated components of the “sphingomyelin cycle” that are altered during apoptosis, transformation, and ER stress. Thus, the unique molecular link of ceramide to NKT cell response, along with the recent identification of sphingomyelin blockers of NKT cell activation, provide two mutually reinforcing links for NKT cell response to sterile cellular stress conditions.
KW - CD1d
KW - lipids
KW - NKT cells
KW - self antigens
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202033405&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2321686121
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2321686121
M3 - Article
C2 - 39141352
AN - SCOPUS:85202033405
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 121
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 34
M1 - e2321686121
ER -