4.6 Article

The assembly of diverse immune receptors is focused on a polar membrane-embedded interaction site

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages 768-779

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040142

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Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [R01 AI054520] Funding Source: Medline

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The majority of receptors responsible for activation of distinct cell types within the immune system assemble with dimeric signaling modules through interaction of a basic transmembrane residue with a pair of acidic residues of the signaling dimer. Because assembly of other membrane proteins requires specific interactions along extended stretches of transmembrane helices, we examined how transmembrane sequences flanking the polar interaction site contribute to assembly for three receptors that associate with different signaling modules-the natural killer cell receptors KIR and NKG2D and the Fc receptor for IgA, Fc alpha RI. The KIR and NKG2D receptors assembled with the DAP12 and DAP10 dimers, respectively, even when the entire KIR or NKG2D transmembrane domains were replaced by polyleucine sequences with a properly positioned basic residue. In contrast, a high degree of specificity for the basic side chain could be observed because the KIR-DAP12 and Fc alpha RI-Fc gamma interactions favored lysine or arginine, respectively. Steric hindrance among incompatible extra-membranous domains and competition for signaling modules also contributed to specificity of assembly. These results demonstrate that these interactions are focused on the polar site created by three ionizable transmembrane residues, and explain how the DAP12 and Fc gamma signaling modules can assemble with large, non-overlapping sets of receptors that have highly divergent transmembrane sequences.

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