scholarly journals Cooperative assembly of a four-molecule signaling complex formed upon T cell antigen receptor activation

2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (51) ◽  
pp. E11914-E11923 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asit Manna ◽  
Huaying Zhao ◽  
Junya Wada ◽  
Lakshmi Balagopalan ◽  
Harichandra D. Tagad ◽  
...  

The T cell antigen receptor encounters foreign antigen during the immune response. Receptor engagement leads to activation of specific protein tyrosine kinases, which then phosphorylate multiple enzymes and adapter proteins. One such enzyme, phospholipase-Cγ1, is responsible for cleavage of a plasma membrane lipid substrate, a phosphoinositide, into two second messengers, diacylglycerol, which activates several enzymes including protein kinase C, and an inositol phosphate, which induces intracellular calcium elevation. In T cells, phospholipase-Cγ1 is recruited to the plasma membrane as part of a four-protein complex containing three adapter molecules. We have used recombinant proteins and synthetic phosphopeptides to reconstitute this quaternary complex in vitro. Extending biophysical tools to study concurrent interactions of the four protein components, we demonstrated the formation and determined the composition of the quaternary complex using multisignal analytical ultracentrifugation, and we characterized the thermodynamic driving forces of assembly by isothermal calorimetry. We demonstrate that the four proteins reversibly associate in a circular arrangement of binding interfaces, each protein interacting with two others. Three interactions are of high affinity, and the fourth is of low affinity, with the assembly of the quaternary complex exhibiting significant enthalpy–entropy compensation as in an entropic switch. Formation of this protein complex enables subsequent recruitment of additional molecules needed to activate phospholipase-Cγ1. Understanding the formation of this complex is fundamental to full characterization of a central pathway in T cell activation. Such knowledge is critical to developing ways in which this pathway can be selectively inhibited.

1970 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 62-71
Author(s):  
Sumit Deswal

T cell antigen receptor (TCR) is a protein-complex expressed on all T cells of the immune system and is responsible for the activation of T cells when infectious agent is presented by an antigen presenting cell (APC) in the form of peptides bound to the major histocompatibility complex (pMHC). Despite numerous studies it is not clear what biochemical changes upon binding of antigen ligand to the extracellular domains of TCR leads to activation of intracellular signaling (a process known as TCR triggering). This review summarizes possible biochemical mechanisms for TCR triggering and discusses their comparative limitations and advantages in explaining various experimental observations.Keywords: T cell antigen receptor; activation; modelDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/njb.v2i1.5684Nepal Journal of Biotechnology Jan.2012, Vol.2(1): 62-71


1992 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 3533-3540 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Egerton ◽  
O.R. Ashe ◽  
D. Chen ◽  
B.J. Druker ◽  
W.H. Burgess ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. S132-S133
Author(s):  
A.E. Schade ◽  
H. Szpurka ◽  
A. Jankowska ◽  
G. Gonzalez-Stawinski ◽  
B.W. Lytle ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 160 (2) ◽  
pp. 541-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
M B Brenner ◽  
I S Trowbridge ◽  
J McLean ◽  
J L Strominger

A mouse antiserum, anti-gp40,49 was obtained by immunizing BALB/c mice with the putative T cell antigen receptor isolated from HPB-MLT cells. This antiserum reacted with peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) and a panel of immunocompetent T cell lines and clones in each case precipitating from lysates of cells labeled by surface iodination, a disulfide-linked dimer consisting of an alpha subunit Mr (46,000-49,000) and a beta subunit Mr (40,000-45,000). Variability in Mr of the two subunits, particularly of the beta (light) subunit, was observed when the receptors of immunocompetent T cell lines with different antigen specificities were compared. Anti-gp40,49 serum reacted selectively with the alpha subunit after reduction and alkylation of the protein complex. These results confirm the relationship between the gp40,49 protein complex of HPB-MLT cells and the putative T cell antigen receptor on normal immunocompetent T cells and indicate that the alpha subunit of the human receptor expressed shared determinant(s) that are immunogenic in the mouse. Some features of the T cell antigen receptor appear to be unusual in that even with a xenoantiserum against the purified molecule, only antibodies against clonotypic determinants could be detected at the cell surface by quantitative immunofluorescence analysis.


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