Molecular mechanisms in the TCR (TCRαβ- CD3δε,γε) interaction with ζ2 homodimers: Clues from a 'phenotypic revertant' clone

5Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

The association between the TCRαβ-CD3γεδε hexamers and ζ2 homodimers in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) constitutes a key step in TCR assembly and export to the T cell surface. Incompletely assembled TCR-CD3 complexes are degraded in the ER or the lysosomes. A previously described Jurkat variant (J79) has a mutation at position 195 on the TCR C, domain causing a phenylalanine to valine exchange. This results in a lack of association between TCRαβ-CD3γεδε hexamers and ζ2 homodimers. Two main hypotheses could explain this phenomenon in J79 cells: TCR-CD3 hexamers may be incapable of interacting with ζ2 due to a structural change in the TCR C(α) region; alternatively, TCR-CD3 hexamers may be incapable of interacting with ζ2 due to factors unrelated to either molecular complex. In order to assess these two possibilities, the TCR-CD3 membrane-negative J79 cells were treated with ethylmethylsulfonate and clones positive for TCR membrane expression were isolated. The characterization of the J79γ58 phenotypic revertant cell line is the subject of this study. The main question was to assess the reason for the TCR re-expression. The TCR on J79γ58 cells appears qualitatively and functionally equivalent to wild-type TCR complexes. Nucleotide sequence analysis confirmed the presence of the original mutation in the TCR C(α) region but failed to detect compensatory mutations in α, β, γ, δ, ε or ζ chains. Thus, mutated J79-TCR-CD3 complexes can interact with ζ2 homodimers. Possible mechanisms for the unsuccessful TCR-CD3 interaction with ζ2 homodimers are presented and discussed.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Martin, E. P. G., Arnaud, J., Alibaud, L., Gouaillard, C., Llobera, R., Huchenq-Champagne, A., & Rubin, B. (1999). Molecular mechanisms in the TCR (TCRαβ- CD3δε,γε) interaction with ζ2 homodimers: Clues from a “phenotypic revertant” clone. International Immunology, 11(7), 1005–1015. https://doi.org/10.1093/intimm/11.7.1005

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free