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Measurement of forces acting on single T-cell receptors

Authors

  • L. Schrangl
  • J. Göhring
  • F. Kellner
  • J.B. Huppa
  • G.J. Schütz

Journal

  • Methods in Molecular Biology

Citation

  • Methods Mol Biol 2800: 147-165

Abstract

  • Molecular forces are increasingly recognized as an important parameter to understand cellular signaling processes. In the recent years, evidence accumulated that also T-cells exert tensile forces via their T-cell receptor during the antigen recognition process. To measure such intercellular pulling forces, one can make use of the elastic properties of spider silk peptides, which act similar to Hookean springs: increased strain corresponds to increased stress applied to the peptide. Combined with Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) to read out the strain, such peptides represent powerful and versatile nanoscopic force sensing tools. In this paper, we provide a detailed protocol how to synthesize a molecular force sensor for application in T-cell antigen recognition and hands-on guidelines on experiments and analysis of obtained single molecule FRET data.


DOI

doi:10.1007/978-1-0716-3834-7_11