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Macromolecular assembly of the adaptor SLP-65 at intracellular vesicles in resting B cells

Authors :
Nadine Herrmann
Julius Kühn
Jürgen Wienands
Christian Griesinger
Janina Boyken
Michael Engelke
Sona Pirkuliyeva
Stefan Becker
Leo E. Wong
Source :
Science Signaling
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The traditional view of how intracellular effector proteins are recruited to the B cell antigen receptor (BCR) complex at the plasma membrane is based on the occurrence of direct protein-protein interactions, as exemplified by the recruitment of the tyrosine kinase Syk (spleen tyrosine kinase) to phosphorylated motifs in BCR signaling subunits. By contrast, the subcellular targeting of the cytosolic adaptor protein SLP-65 (Src homology 2 domain-containing leukocyte adaptor protein of 65 kD), which serves as a proximal Syk substrate, is unclear. We showed that SLP-65 activation required its association at vesicular compartments in resting B cells. A module of similar to 50 amino acid residues located at the amino terminus of SLP-65 anchored SLP-65 to the vesicles. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed that the SLP-65 amino terminus was structurally disordered in solution, but could bind in a structured manner to noncharged lipid components of cellular membranes. Our finding that preformed vesicular signaling scaffolds are required for B cell activation indicates that vesicles may deliver preassembled signaling cargo to sites of BCR activation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science Signaling
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3059b8fc1a015d7b938856511fe6ce83