Literature DB >> 14993428

The missing link(er): a return to symmetry in antigen receptor signaling?

Ronald L Wange1.   

Abstract

B lymphocytes and T lymphocytes utilize several proteins with common functions to transduce signals from their respective receptors. However, at the hierarchial signalling level of SLP-76 [Src homology 2(SH2) domain-containing leukocyte protein of 76-kDa] and LAT (linker for activation of T cells) in T cells, the only corresponding protein in B cells was known to be BLNK (B cell linker protein). It was thought that perhaps BLNK performed the cognate roles of SLP-76 and LAT in B cells; however, mounting evidence to the contrary revealed that this hypothesis was not robust. Two laboratories have recently described the characterization of a protein expressed in B cells and myeloid cells, alternatively termed NTAL (non-T cell activation linker) or LAB (linker for activation of B cells). NTAL/LAB and LAT may have arisen from a primordial gene-duplicating event, but genes that code for the two proteins do not share a very high degree of sequence identity. Wange discusses the results of the two reports, the evidence for functional homology between LAT and NTAL/LAB, and the possibility that the differences between them might lead to specific clinical therapeutics to manipulate immune cell responses.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14993428     DOI: 10.1124/mi.3.2.75

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Interv        ISSN: 1534-0384


  1 in total

1.  Single and combined deletions of the NTAL/LAB and LAT adaptors minimally affect B-cell development and function.

Authors:  Ying Wang; Ondrej Horvath; Andrea Hamm-Baarke; Mireille Richelme; Claude Grégoire; Rodolphe Guinamard; Vaclav Horejsi; Pavla Angelisova; Jiri Spicka; Burkhart Schraven; Bernard Malissen; Marie Malissen
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 4.272

  1 in total

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