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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The transmembrane orientation of the epsilon chain of the TcR/CD3 complex.

The antigen receptor of the T lymphocytes is one of the most complex eukaryotic membrane structures studied to date. The T cell receptor (TcR) consists of two disulfide-linked glycoprotein chains (alpha/beta or gamma/delta) and is noncovalently associated with a group of small and invariable CD 3 proteins. Four CD 3 chains have been recognized: two highly homologous glycoproteins CD 3 gamma and delta, the more distantly related nonglycosylated CD 3 epsilon chain, and the nonglycosylated CD 3 zeta, the latter being present as a homodimer. The unraveling of the architecture of the TcR/CD 3 complex is crucial to our understanding of the processes underlying its assembly, recognition and transmembrane signaling. The transmembrane orientation of the TcR chains and of CD 3 gamma and CD 3 delta can be directly inferred from their primary structure, based on the presence of concensus N-linked glycosylation sites N-terminal of their transmembrane domains. This prediction can not be made, however, for nonglycosylated molecules like the CD 3 epsilon chain. In order to determine the transmembrane orientation of CD 3 epsilon, anti-peptide antisera directed against the N-termini of the human and murine CD 3 epsilon chains were generated in rabbits. Both antisera stained intact T cells, demonstrating that the N-terminus of the CD 3 epsilon chain was located at the outer surface of the plasma membrane. The anti-human CD 3 epsilon peptide antiserum was found to be mitogenic for peripheral blood T cells, a finding previously reported only for monoclonal anti-TcR/CD 3 reagents. Using a novel transient expression system in murine T lymphocytes, the human CD 3 epsilon chain could be expressed on the surface of CD 3+, but not CD 3- murine T cells, as indicated by fluorescence staining with the anti-peptide antiserum. This experiment confirmed the specificity of the anti-peptide antiserum and, perhaps more importantly, indicated that the human CD 3 epsilon chain was correctly assembled in the murine CD 3 complex. Moreover, the anti-human CD 3 monoclonal antibody UCHT1 was found to stain T cells expressing the human CD 3 epsilon chain.[1]

References

  1. The transmembrane orientation of the epsilon chain of the TcR/CD3 complex. Clevers, H., Dunlap, S., Terhorst, C. Eur. J. Immunol. (1988) [Pubmed]
 
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