BTLA公司
细胞生物学
调解人
生物
糖蛋白
受体
T细胞
化学
分子生物学
生物化学
遗传学
免疫系统
作者
Timothy C. Cheung,Ian R. Humphreys,Karen G. Potter,Paula S. Norris,Heather M. Shumway,Bonnie Robin Tran,Ginelle Patterson,Rochelle Jean-Jacques,Miri Yoon,Patricia G. Spear,Kenneth M. Murphy,Nell S. Lurain,Chris A. Benedict,Carl F. Ware
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0506172102
摘要
The herpesvirus entry mediator (HVEM), a member of the TNF receptor (TNFR) superfamily, can act as a molecular switch that modulates T cell activation by propagating positive signals from the TNF-related ligand LIGHT (TNFR superfamily 14), or inhibitory signals through the Ig superfamily member B and T lymphocyte attenuator (BTLA). Competitive binding analysis and mutagenesis reveals a unique BTLA binding site centered on a critical lysine residue in cysteine-rich domain 1 of HVEM. The BTLA binding site on HVEM overlaps with the binding site for the herpes simplex virus 1 envelope glycoprotein D, but is distinct from where LIGHT binds, yet glycoprotein D inhibits the binding of both ligands, potentially nullifying the pathway. The binding site on HVEM for BTLA is conserved in the orphan TNFR, UL144, present in human CMV. UL144 binds BTLA, but not LIGHT, and inhibits T cell proliferation, selectively mimicking the inhibitory cosignaling function of HVEM. The demonstration that distinct herpesviruses target the HVEM–BTLA cosignaling pathway suggests the importance of this pathway in regulating T cell activation during host defenses.
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