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result(s) for
"Egorov, Evgeny S."
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The Changing Landscape of Naive T Cell Receptor Repertoire With Human Aging
2018
Human aging is associated with a profound loss of thymus productivity, yet naïve T lymphocytes still maintain their numbers by division in the periphery for many years. The extent of such proliferation may depend on the cytokine environment, including IL-7 and T-cell receptor (TCR) \"tonic\" signaling mediated by self pMHCs recognition. Additionally, intrinsic properties of distinct subpopulations of naïve T cells could influence the overall dynamics of aging-related changes within the naïve T cell compartment. Here, we investigated the differences in the architecture of TCR beta repertoires for naïve CD4, naïve CD8, naïve CD4
CD25
CD31
(enriched with recent thymic emigrants, RTE), and mature naïve CD4
CD25
CD31
peripheral blood subsets between young and middle-age/old healthy individuals. In addition to observing the accumulation of clonal expansions (as was shown previously), we reveal several notable changes in the characteristics of T cell repertoire. We observed significant decrease of CDR3 length, NDN insert, and number of non-template added N nucleotides within TCR beta CDR3 with aging, together with a prominent change of physicochemical properties of the central part of CDR3 loop. These changes were similar across CD4, CD8, RTE-enriched, and mature CD4 subsets of naïve T cells, with minimal or no difference observed between the latter two subsets for individuals of the same age group. We also observed an increase in \"publicity\" (fraction of shared clonotypes) of CD4, but not CD8 naïve T cell repertoires. We propose several explanations for these phenomena built upon previous studies of naïve T-cell homeostasis, and call for further studies of the mechanisms causing the observed changes and of consequences of these changes in respect of the possible holes formed in the landscape of naïve T cell TCR repertoire.
Journal Article
KillerOrange, a Genetically Encoded Photosensitizer Activated by Blue and Green Light
by
Sarkisyan, Karen S.
,
Sharonov, George V.
,
Solntsev, Kyril M.
in
Ablation
,
Bacteria
,
Biochemistry
2015
Genetically encoded photosensitizers, proteins that produce reactive oxygen species when illuminated with visible light, are increasingly used as optogenetic tools. Their applications range from ablation of specific cell populations to precise optical inactivation of cellular proteins. Here, we report an orange mutant of red fluorescent protein KillerRed that becomes toxic when illuminated with blue or green light. This new protein, KillerOrange, carries a tryptophan-based chromophore that is novel for photosensitizers. We show that KillerOrange can be used simultaneously and independently from KillerRed in both bacterial and mammalian cells offering chromatic orthogonality for light-activated toxicity.
Journal Article
Crystal Structure of Phototoxic Orange Fluorescent Proteins with a Tryptophan-Based Chromophore
by
Pletneva, Nadya V.
,
Sarkisyan, Karen S.
,
Dauter, Zbigniew
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino Acid Substitution
,
Biological research
2015
Phototoxic fluorescent proteins represent a sparse group of genetically encoded photosensitizers that could be used for precise light-induced inactivation of target proteins, DNA damage, and cell killing. Only two such GFP-based fluorescent proteins (FPs), KillerRed and its monomeric variant SuperNova, were described up to date. Here, we present a crystallographic study of their two orange successors, dimeric KillerOrange and monomeric mKillerOrange, at 1.81 and 1.57 Å resolution, respectively. They are the first orange-emitting protein photosensitizers with a tryptophan-based chromophore (Gln65-Trp66-Gly67). Same as their red progenitors, both orange photosensitizers have a water-filled channel connecting the chromophore to the β-barrel exterior and enabling transport of ROS. In both proteins, Trp66 of the chromophore adopts an unusual trans-cis conformation stabilized by H-bond with the nearby Gln159. This trans-cis conformation along with the water channel was shown to be a key structural feature providing bright orange emission and phototoxicity of both examined orange photosensitizers.
Journal Article
Naïve Regulatory T Cell Subset Is Altered in X-Linked Agammaglobulinemia
by
Khaitov, Musa R.
,
Lupyr, Ksenia R.
,
Staroverov, Dmitriy B.
in
Adolescent
,
Adult
,
Agammaglobulinemia
2021
The interplay between T- and B-cell compartments during naïve, effector and memory T cell maturation is critical for a balanced immune response. Primary B-cell immunodeficiency arising from X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) offers a model to explore B cell impact on T cell subsets, starting from the thymic selection. Here we investigated characteristics of naïve and effector T cell subsets in XLA patients, revealing prominent alterations in the corresponding T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoires. We observed immunosenescence in terms of decreased diversity of naïve CD4 + and CD8 + TCR repertoires in XLA donors. The most substantial alterations were found within naïve CD4 + subsets, and we have investigated these in greater detail. In particular, increased clonality and convergence, along with shorter CDR3 regions, suggested narrower focused antigen-specific maturation of thymus-derived naïve T reg (CD4 + CD45RA + CD27 + CD25 + ) in the absence of B cells - normally presenting diverse self and commensal antigens. The naïve T reg proportion among naïve CD4 T cells was decreased in XLA patients, supporting the concept of impaired thymic naïve T reg selection. Furthermore, the naïve T reg subset showed prominent differences at the transcriptome level, including increased expression of genes specific for antigen-presenting and myeloid cells. Altogether, our findings suggest active B cell involvement in CD4 T cell subsets maturation, including B cell-dependent expansion of the naïve Treg TCR repertoire that enables better control of self-reactive T cells.
Journal Article
Local fitness landscape of the green fluorescent protein
2016
Comprehensive genotype–phenotype mapping of the green fluorescent protein shows that the local fitness peak is narrow, shaped by a high prevalence of epistatic interactions, providing for the loss of fluorescence when the joint effect of mutations exceeds a threshold.
Genotype to phenotype mapping of a model protein
Fyodor Kondrashov and colleagues report comprehensive genotype–phenotype mapping across an entire protein, based on analysis of the fitness landscape of green fluorescent protein (GFP) using a molecular barcoding and sequencing approach. They find that the fitness landscape is characterized by locally narrow regions, combined with a high prevalence of epistatic interactions, providing for the loss of fluorescence when the joint effect of mutations exceeds a threshold.
Fitness landscapes
1
,
2
depict how genotypes manifest at the phenotypic level and form the basis of our understanding of many areas of biology
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
, yet their properties remain elusive. Previous studies have analysed specific genes, often using their function as a proxy for fitness
2
,
4
, experimentally assessing the effect on function of single mutations and their combinations in a specific sequence
2
,
5
,
8
,
9
,
10
,
11
,
12
,
13
,
14
,
15
or in different sequences
2
,
3
,
5
,
16
,
17
,
18
. However, systematic high-throughput studies of the local fitness landscape of an entire protein have not yet been reported. Here we visualize an extensive region of the local fitness landscape of the green fluorescent protein from
Aequorea victoria
(avGFP) by measuring the native function (fluorescence) of tens of thousands of derivative genotypes of avGFP. We show that the fitness landscape of avGFP is narrow, with 3/4 of the derivatives with a single mutation showing reduced fluorescence and half of the derivatives with four mutations being completely non-fluorescent. The narrowness is enhanced by epistasis, which was detected in up to 30% of genotypes with multiple mutations and mostly occurred through the cumulative effect of slightly deleterious mutations causing a threshold-like decrease in protein stability and a concomitant loss of fluorescence. A model of orthologous sequence divergence spanning hundreds of millions of years predicted the extent of epistasis in our data, indicating congruence between the fitness landscape properties at the local and global scales. The characterization of the local fitness landscape of avGFP has important implications for several fields including molecular evolution, population genetics and protein design.
Journal Article
Memory CD4+ T cells are generated in the human fetal intestine
by
Izraelson, Mark
,
de Miranda, Noel F. C. C.
,
Britanova, Olga V
in
631/250/1619
,
631/250/2152
,
631/250/347
2019
The fetus is thought to be protected from exposure to foreign antigens, yet CD45RO
+
T cells reside in the fetal intestine. Here we combined functional assays with mass cytometry, single-cell RNA sequencing and high-throughput T cell antigen receptor (TCR) sequencing to characterize the CD4
+
T cell compartment in the human fetal intestine. We identified 22 CD4
+
T cell clusters, including naive-like, regulatory-like and memory-like subpopulations, which were confirmed and further characterized at the transcriptional level. Memory-like CD4
+
T cells had high expression of Ki-67, indicative of cell division, and CD5, a surrogate marker of TCR avidity, and produced the cytokines IFN-γ and IL-2. Pathway analysis revealed a differentiation trajectory associated with cellular activation and proinflammatory effector functions, and TCR repertoire analysis indicated clonal expansions, distinct repertoire characteristics and interconnections between subpopulations of memory-like CD4
+
T cells. Imaging mass cytometry indicated that memory-like CD4
+
T cells colocalized with antigen-presenting cells. Collectively, these results provide evidence for the generation of memory-like CD4
+
T cells in the human fetal intestine that is consistent with exposure to foreign antigens.
Koning and colleagues used mass cytometry, single-cell RNA-seq and high-throughput TCR sequencing to characterize the CD4
+
T cell compartment in the human fetal intestine.
Journal Article
MHC-II alleles shape the CDR3 repertoires of conventional and regulatory naïve CD4⁺ T cells
by
Shcherbinin, Dmitrii S.
,
Meiler, Jens
,
Apt, Alexander S.
in
Amino acids
,
Antigens
,
Autoantigens
2020
T cell maturation and activation depend upon T cell receptor (TCR) interactions with a wide variety of antigenic peptides displayed in a given major histocompatibility complex (MHC) context. Complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3) is the most variable part of the TCRα and -β chains, which govern interactions with peptide–MHC complexes. However, it remains unclear how the CDR3 landscape is shaped by individual MHC context during thymic selection of naïve T cells. We established two mouse strains carrying distinct allelic variants of H2-A and analyzed thymic and peripheral production and TCR repertoires of naïve conventional CD4⁺ T (Tconv) and naïve regulatory CD4⁺ T (Treg) cells. Compared with tuberculosis-resistant C57BL/6 (H2-Ab) mice, the tuberculosis-susceptible H2-Aj mice had fewer CD4⁺ T cells of both subsets in the thymus. In the periphery, this deficiency was only apparent for Tconv and was compensated for by peripheral reconstitution for Treg. We show that H2-Aj favors selection of a narrower and more convergent repertoire with more hydrophobic and strongly interacting amino acid residues in the middle of CDR3α and CDR3β, suggesting more stringent selection against a narrower peptide–MHCII context. H2-Aj and H2-Ab mice have prominent reciprocal differences in CDR3α and CDR3β features, probably reflecting distinct modes of TCR fitting to MHC-II variants. These data reveal the mechanics and extent of how MHC-II shapes the naïve CD4⁺ T cell CDR3 landscape, which essentially defines adaptive response to infections and self-antigens.
Journal Article
Crystal structure of phototoxic orange fluorescent proteins with α tryptophan-based chromophore
Phototoxic fluorescent proteins represent a sparse group of genetically encoded photosensitizers that could be used for precise light-induced inactivation of target proteins, DNA damage, and cell killing. Only two such GFP-based fluorescent proteins (FPs), KillerRed and its monomeric variant SuperNova, were described up to date. We present a crystallographic study of their two orange successors, dimeric KillerOrange and monomeric mKiller-Orange, at 1.81 and 1.57 Å resolution, respectively. They are the first orange-emitting protein photosensitizers with a tryptophan-based chromophore (Gln65-Trp66-Gly67). Same as their red progenitors, both orange photosensitizers have a water-filled channel connecting the chromophore to the β-barrel exterior and enabling transport of ROS. In both proteins, Trp66 of the chromophore adopts an unusual trans-cis conformation stabilized by H-bond with the nearby Gln159. This trans-cis conformation along with the water channel was shown to be a key structural feature providing bright orange emission and phototoxicity of both examined orange photosensitizers.
Journal Article
KillerOrange, a Genetically Encoded Photosensitizer Activated by Blue and Green Light: e0145287
Genetically encoded photosensitizers, proteins that produce reactive oxygen species when illuminated with visible light, are increasingly used as optogenetic tools. Their applications range from ablation of specific cell populations to precise optical inactivation of cellular proteins. Here, we report an orange mutant of red fluorescent protein KillerRed that becomes toxic when illuminated with blue or green light. This new protein, KillerOrange, carries a tryptophan-based chromophore that is novel for photosensitizers. We show that KillerOrange can be used simultaneously and independently from KillerRed in both bacterial and mammalian cells offering chromatic orthogonality for light-activated toxicity.
Journal Article