| Literature DB >> 28735895 |
Adam H Courtney1, Jeanine F Amacher2, Theresa A Kadlecek3, Marianne N Mollenauer3, Byron B Au-Yeung1, John Kuriyan4, Arthur Weiss5.
Abstract
The Src Family kinase Lck sets a critical threshold for T cell activation because it phosphorylates the TCR complex and the Zap70 kinase. How a T cell controls the abundance of active Lck molecules remains poorly understood. We have identified an unappreciated role for a phosphosite, Y192, within the Lck SH2 domain that profoundly affects the amount of active Lck in cells. Notably, mutation of Y192 blocks critical TCR-proximal signaling events and impairs thymocyte development in retrogenic mice. We determined that these defects are caused by hyperphosphorylation of the inhibitory C-terminal tail of Lck. Our findings reveal that modification of Y192 inhibits the ability of CD45 to associate with Lck in cells and dephosphorylate the C-terminal tail of Lck, which prevents its adoption of an active open conformation. These results suggest a negative feedback loop that responds to signaling events that tune active Lck amounts and TCR sensitivity.Entities:
Keywords: CD45; Lck; SH2 domain; Src family kinase; T cell antigen receptor; T cell signaling; TCR; kinase; phosphatase; phosphorylation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28735895 PMCID: PMC5558854 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2017.06.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970