4.5 Article

Complex phosphorylation dynamics control the composition of the Syk interactome in B cells

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 6, Pages 1550-1562

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eji.201041326

Keywords

B-cell activation; Interactome; Spleen tyrosine kinase; 14-3-3

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [FOR 521, SFB 860]
  2. European Community [201549, EURO-PADnet HEALTH-F2-2008-201549]

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Spleen tyrosine kinase Syk provides critical transducer functions for a number of immune cell receptors and has been implicated in the generation of several forms of leukemias. Catalytic activity and the ability of Syk to interact with other signaling elements depend on the phosphorylation status of Syk. We have now identified and quantified the full spectrum of phosphoacceptor sites in human Syk as well as the interactome of Syk in resting and activated B cells by high-resolution mass spectrometry. While the majority of inducible phosphorylations occurred on tyrosine residues, one of the most frequently detected phosphosites encompassed serine 297 located within the linker insert distinguishing the long and short isoforms of Syk. Full-length Syk can associate with more than 25 distinct ligands including the 14-3-3 gamma adaptor protein, which binds directly to phosphoserine 297. The latter complex attenuates inducible plasma membrane recruitment of Syk, thereby limiting antigen receptor-proximal signaling pathways. Collectively, the established ligand library provides a basis to understand the complexity of the Syk signaling network.

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