4.6 Article

The Protein Phosphatase 2A Regulatory Subunit B56γ Mediates Suppression of T Cell Receptor (TCR)-induced Nuclear Factor-κB (NF-κB) Activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 21, Pages 14996-15004

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.533547

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cooperation Program in Cancer Research of the Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum (DKFZ)
  2. Israeli Ministry of Science, Culture, and Sport (MOST)
  3. Deutsche Krebshilfe
  4. Wilhelm Sander Stiftung
  5. Helmholtz Alliance-Immunotherapy of Cancer [HA202]
  6. Jose Carreras Leukamie-Stiftung

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NF-kappa B is an important transcription factor in the immune system, and aberrant NF-kappa B activity contributes to malignant diseases and autoimmunity. In T cells, NF-kappa B is activated upon TCR stimulation, and signal transduction to NF-kappa B activation is triggered by a cascade of phosphorylation events. However, fine tuning and termination of TCR signaling are only partially understood. Phosphatases oppose the role of kinases by removing phosphate moieties. The catalytic activity of the protein phosphatase PP2A has been implicated in the regulation of NF-kappa B. PP2A acts in trimeric complexes in which the catalytic subunit is promiscuous and the regulatory subunit confers substrate specificity. To understand and eventually target NF-kappa Bspecific PP2A functions it is essential to define the regulatory PP2A subunit involved. So far, the regulatory PP2A subunit that mediates NF-kappa B suppression in T cells remained undefined. By performing a siRNA screen in Jurkat T cells harboring a NF-kappa B-responsive luciferase reporter, we identified the PP2A regulatory subunit B56 gamma as negative regulator of NF-kappa B in TCR signaling. B56 gamma was strongly up-regulated upon primary human T cell activation, and B56 gamma silencing induced increased I kappa B kinase (IKK) and I kappa B alpha phosphorylation upon TCR stimulation. B56 gamma silencing enhanced NF-kappa B activity, resulting in increased NF-kappa B target gene expression including the T cell cytokine IL-2. In addition, T cell proliferation was increased upon B56 gamma silencing. These data help to understand the physiology of PP2A function in T cells and the pathophysiology of diseases involving PP2A and NF-kappa B.

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