Regulation of β1 Integrin-Mediated Adhesion by T Cell Receptor Signaling Involves ZAP-70 but Differs from Signaling Events That Regulate Transcriptional Activity
Author(s) -
Jennifer Epler,
Rugao Liu,
Heekyoung Chung,
Nadine Ottoson,
Yoji Shimizu
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.165.9.4941
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , integrin , tyrosine phosphorylation , jurkat cells , t cell receptor , biology , integrin, beta 6 , tyrosine kinase , cd3 , integrin alpha m , signal transduction , phosphorylation , cell adhesion , cd49c , t cell , chemistry , receptor , biochemistry , cell , immunology , cd8 , antigen , immune system , flow cytometry
Stimulation of the CD3/TCR results within minutes in an increase in T cell adhesion mediated by beta(1) integrins. The biochemical pathways that control CD3-mediated increases in beta(1) integrin-mediated adhesion remain poorly characterized. In this study, the role of the tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 in the regulation of beta(1) integrin activity by the CD3/TCR was investigated. CD3 stimulation did not increase beta(1) integrin-mediated adhesion of the ZAP-70-deficient Jurkat T cell line, P116, to the beta(1) integrin ligand fibronectin. Reintroduction of wild-type ZAP-70, but not a kinase-inactive variant, K369R, corrected the adhesive defect observed in P116 T cells. In addition, the kinase-inactive ZAP-70 mutant inhibited CD3-induced adhesion of primary human T cell blasts. Interestingly, a ZAP-70 mutant with a tyrosine to phenylalanine substitution at position 319 (Y319F) restored the adhesive defect in P116 T cells, even though Y319F ZAP-70 failed to fully reconstitute CD3-initiated NF-AT-dependent transcription and tyrosine phosphorylation of the LAT adapter protein. Finally, expression of mutants of LAT and the SLP-76 adapter protein that modulate CD3-mediated activation of an NF-AT reporter gene failed to block CD3-induced increases in beta(1) integrin-mediated adhesion. These observations support a model in which the tyrosine kinase activity of ZAP-70 kinase is critical for regulation of beta(1) integrin activity by CD3/TCR. However, the signaling events downstream of ZAP-70 that regulate CD3/TCR-mediated activation of beta(1) integrin function exhibit key differences when compared with the signaling pathways that regulate transcriptional events initiated by CD3/TCR stimulation.
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