Phosphorylation of Bcl10 Negatively Regulates T-Cell Receptor-Mediated NF-κB Activation
Author(s) -
Hu Zeng,
Lie Di,
Guoping Fu,
Yuhong Chen,
Xiang Gao,
Langlai Xu,
Xin Lin,
Renren Wen
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.01645-06
Subject(s) - bcl10 , biology , phosphorylation , signal transducing adaptor protein , microbiology and biotechnology , serine , t cell receptor , receptor , signal transduction , t cell , biochemistry , immunology , immune system , gene
Bcl10 (B-cell lymphoma 10) is an adaptor protein comprised of an N-terminal caspase recruitment domain and a C-terminal serine/threonine-rich domain. Bcl10 plays a critical role in antigen receptor-mediated NF-κB activation and lymphocyte development and functions. Our current study has discovered that T-cell activation induced monophosphorylation and biphosphorylation of Bcl10 and has identified S138 within Bcl10 as one of the T-cell receptor-induced phosphorylation sites. Alteration of S138 to an alanine residue impaired T-cell activation-induced ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of Bcl10, ultimately resulting in prolongation of TCR-mediated NF-κB activation and enhancement of interleukin-2 production. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that phosphorylation of Bcl10 at S138 down-regulates Bcl10 protein levels and thus negatively regulates T-cell receptor-mediated NF-κB activation.
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