Opto-APC: Engineering of cells that display phytochrome B on their surface for optogenetic studies of cell-cell interactions

Front Mol Biosci. 2023 Feb 20:10:1143274. doi: 10.3389/fmolb.2023.1143274. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The kinetics of a ligand-receptor interaction determine the responses of the receptor-expressing cell. One approach to experimentally and reversibly change this kinetics on demand is optogenetics. We have previously developed a system in which the interaction of a modified receptor with an engineered ligand can be controlled by light. In this system the ligand is a soluble Phytochrome B (PhyB) tetramer and the receptor is fused to a mutated PhyB-interacting factor (PIFS). However, often the natural ligand is not soluble, but expressed as a membrane protein on another cell. This allows ligand-receptor interactions in two dimensions. Here, we developed a strategy to generate cells that display PhyB as a membrane-bound protein by expressing the SpyCatcher fused to a transmembrane domain in HEK-293T cells and covalently coupling purified PhyB-SpyTag to these cells. As proof-of-principle, we use Jurkat T cells that express a GFP-PIFS-T cell receptor and show that these cells can be stimulated by the PhyB-coupled HEK-293T cells in a light dependent manner. Thus, we call the PhyB-coupled cells opto-antigen presenting cells (opto-APCs). Our work expands the toolbox of optogenetic technologies, allowing two-dimensional ligand-receptor interactions to be controlled by light.

Keywords: SpyCatcher; T cell receptor; interaction; ligand; optogenetics; phytochrome B; receptor.

Grants and funding

This study was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) under Germany’s Excellence Strategy-EXC-2189 - Project ID: 390939984 and under the Excellence Initiative of the German Federal and State Governments-EXC-294, and in part by the Ministry for Science, Research and Arts of the State of Baden-Württemberg to WS, SM, BL, and WW, and SFB1381 (A9 to WS and YIG02 to OY). AE and VI were supported by DFG through GSC-4 (Spemann Graduate School).