A symmetric geometry of transmembrane domains inside the B cell antigen receptor complex

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Abstract

B lymphocytes have the ability to sense thousands of structurally different antigens and produce cognate antibodies against these molecules. For this they carry on their surface multiple copies of the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) comprising the membrane-bound Ig (mIg) molecule and the Igα/Igβ heterodimer functioning as antigen binding and signal transducing components, respectively. The mIg is a symmetric complex of 2 identical membrane-bound heavy chains (mHC) and 2 identical light chains. How the symmetric mIg molecule is asymmetrically associated with only one Igα/Igβ heterodimer has been a puzzle. Here we describe that Igα and Igβ both carry on one side of their α-helical transmembrane domain a conserved amino acid motif. By a mutational analysis in combination with a BCR rebuilding approach, we show that this motif is required for the retention of unassembled Igα or Igβ molecules inside the endoplasmic reticulum and the binding of the Igα/Igβ heterodimer to the mIg molecule. We suggest that the BCR forms within the lipid bilayer of the membrane a symmetric Igα-mHC:mHC-Igβ complex that is stabilized by an aromatic proline-tyrosine interaction. Outside the membrane this symmetry is broken by the disulfide-bridged dimerization of the extracellular Ig domains of Igα and Igβ. However, symmetry of the receptor can be regained by a dimerization of 2 BCR complexes as suggested by the dissociation activation model.

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Gottwick, C., He, X., Hofmann, A., Vesper, N., Reth, M., & Yang, J. (2019). A symmetric geometry of transmembrane domains inside the B cell antigen receptor complex. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 116(27), 13468–13473. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1907481116

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