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1.
Cytokine signaling involves the activation of the Janus kinase (JAK) family of tyrosine kinases. These enzymes are physically associated with cytokine receptor components. Here, we sought to define the molecular basis of the interaction between Tyk2 and IFNAR1, a component of the interferon alpha/beta receptor, by delimiting a minimal IFNAR1 binding region in the Tyk2 protein. Using an in vitro assay system, we narrowed down the interaction domain to a region comprising the JH7 and part of the JH6 homology boxes (amino acids 22-221). When expressed in Tyk2-negative cells, the JH7-6 region was unable to stabilize IFNAR1 protein levels, a critical function that we previously attributed to the N region (amino acids 1-591) of Tyk2. Moreover, substitution of the JH7-JH6 domain in JAK1 with that of Tyk2 did not restore IFNAR1 level nor interferon alpha signaling in Tyk2-negative cells. Thus, the major interaction surface lies within JH7-6, but additional JH regions (JH5-4-3) contribute in a specific manner to the in vivo assembly of Tyk2 and IFNAR1. Evidence is also provided of the lack of specificity of the Tyk2 kinase-like and tyrosine kinase domains in interferon alpha/beta receptor signaling.  相似文献   

2.
Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha)-mediated intracellular signaling is initiated by ligand-induced receptor dimerization, tyrosine phosphorylation of the Tyk2 and Jak1 tyrosine kinases, and subsequent phosphorylation of the Stat1 and Stat2 proteins. The IFN-alpha receptor consists of at least two distinct subunits. One subunit, IFNAR1, has low affinity binding for interferon yet is required for signal transduction. We introduced mutations in the cytoplasmic domain of human IFNAR1 in order to identify residues involved in the mediation of biological responses. We took advantage of the species specificity of the interferon receptors by analyzing human IFN-alpha-induced major histocompatibility complex class I antigen expression in mouse L929 cells stably transfected with mutant human receptors. The membrane proximal 60-amino acids were insufficient to signal a biological response even though within these residues Tyk2 and Stat2 binding sites have been identified. IFN-alpha-induced receptor tyrosine phosphorylation was not critical for signaling because mutation of Tyr residues to Phe did not prevent the biological response to IFN-alpha. The deletion of a 16-amino acid region highly homologous between species created a receptor which signals an enhanced response. Tyrosine dephosphorylation is a component of this enhanced response as mutation of the Tyr residues within this region to Phe resulted in a receptor with increased sensitivity to IFN. The known signaling molecules that interact with IFNAR1 are positive regulators of IFN-alpha function. The presence of this domain in the COOH-terminal region suggests that the receptor may interact with signaling molecules that negatively regulate interferon responses.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Flt-1 tyrosine kinase, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor-1, binds VEGF and a new VEGF-related ligand, placenta growth factor, but KDR/Flk-1 (VEGF receptor-2) binds only VEGF. To characterize the functional regions in the Flt-1 extracellular domain such as the ligand binding region and the dimer formation of the receptor, we constructed a series of mutants of the Flt-1 extracellular domain as soluble forms in a baculovirus system. We found that a region carrying the N-terminal 1st to 3rd immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domains of Flt-1 binds both ligands with high affinity. However, for dimer formation of soluble Flt-1, a region further downstream in the Flt-1 extracellular domain was required. Mutant Flt-1 receptors expressed in COS cells confirmed the requirement of the 4th to 7th Ig region for the activation of Flt-1 tyrosine kinase. Soluble Flt-1 carrying the N-terminal 1st to 3rd Ig region suppressed VEGF-dependent endothelial proliferation in vitro to the same level as the larger forms of soluble Flt-1, suggesting that the binding of one soluble Flt-1 molecule to one subunit of the VEGF homodimer may be sufficient to block the VEGF activity.  相似文献   

5.
6.
We describe how constraints on the binding of human interferons (IFNs), alpha1 and alpha2 and alpha8 on mouse cells are partially relieved by the expression of the bovine (Bo) or human (Hu) IFN alpha/beta receptor (IFNAR) component in these cells. We show that, while the binding of all three is substantially increased by the transfection of Bo IFNAR, it is accompanied by an increase in activity only in the case of alpha2 and alpha8 (IFNs that otherwise have little activity on mouse cells). IFN alpha1, which shows some partial activity on mouse cells, responds to the presence of Bo IFNAR by acting, at low concentrations, as a competitive antagonist to IFNs alpha2 and alpha8. A review of published results on IFN hybrid scanning and on the effects of expressing Bo IFNAR in human cells led us to propose that an N-terminal segment of the IFN molecule interacts directly with IFNAR. Applying site-directed mutagenesis to an IFN hybrid; alpha8[60]alpha1[92]alpha8, we show that the point mutations K84 to E84 and Y90 to D90 act synergistically to cause the hybrid to behave as the parental IFN alpha8, switching the preference from Mu to Hu IFNAR in transfected mouse cells. The published structural models for IFN reveal that positions 84 and 90 span the exposed residues of the alpha-helix C of the IFN molecule. We derive a model of IFN-receptor interaction in which the A helix and the C helix of IFN interact with IFNAR and in which a binding phase can be distinguished from a binding/activity phase. We propose that the so-called "hot" domains of the IFN molecule (the AB loop and the D helix) are presented by IFNAR to interact with an additional component of the functional receptor.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Type I interferons bind to a common receptor (IFNAR), composed of two transmembrane polypeptides, IFNAR-1 and IFNAR-2. Although human IFNAR-1 has a weak intrinsic affinity for human Type I interferons (IFNs), bovine IFNAR-1 binds human Type I IFNs with moderate (nM) affinity, and can be conveniently used to investigate the regions of IFNAR-1 involved in ligand binding. We have constructed 14 bovine/human IFNAR-1 chimeras by exchanging homologous subdomains in the extracellular portion of the receptor. These chimeras were expressed at very high levels on COS cells, and their ability to bind HuIFN-alpha2 was measured. No single bovine subdomain substituted into human IFNAR-1 could confer moderate-affinity ligand binding on the resulting chimera. Simultaneous substitution of bovine IFNAR-1 subdomains 2 and 3 for the homologous human subdomains resulted in a dramatic increase in the binding of IFN-alpha2, suggesting that critical determinants for moderate-affinity ligand binding by BoIFNAR-1 reside in these two subdomains. Bovine subdomains 1 and/or 4 each further enhanced IFN-alpha2 binding in the presence of bovine subdomains 2 and 3. Thus, the binding interactions of BoIFNAR-1 with IFNs appears to be more complex than that of other class II cytokine receptors with their ligands.  相似文献   

9.
We have performed a structure-function analysis of extracellular domain regions of the human IFN-alpha receptor (hIFNAR1) using mAbs generated by immunizing mice with a soluble hIFNAR1-IgG. Five mAbs described in this study recognize different epitopes as determined by a competitive binding ELISA and by alanine substitution mutant analyses of the hIFNAR1-IgG. Two mAbs, 2E1 and 4A7, are able to block IFN-stimulated gene factor 3 (ISGF3) formation and inhibit the antiviral cytopathic effect induced by several IFN-alpha (IFN-alpha 2/1, -alpha 1, -alpha 2, -alpha 5, and -alpha 8). None of these anti-IFNAR1 mAbs were able to block activity of IFN-beta. mAb 4A7 binds to a domain 1-hIFNAR1-IgG but not to a domain 2-hIFNAR1-IgG, which suggests that its binding region is located in domain 1. The binding of the most potent blocking mAb, 2E1, requires the presence of domain 1 and domain 2. The most critical residue for 2E1 binding is a lysine residue at position 249, which is in domain 2. These findings suggest that both domain 1 and domain 2 are necessary to form a functional receptor and that a region in domain 2 is important. IFN-beta recognizes regions of the hIFNAR complex that are distinct from those important for the IFN-alpha.  相似文献   

10.
Treatment of quiescent NIH3T3 cells with PDGF BB results in the transient activation and hyperphosphorylation of the protein-tyrosine kinase, c-Src. These effects correlate with novel serine and tyrosine phosphorylations in the N-terminal non-catalytic region of the molecule, which contains an SH3 and SH2 domain. In this study, a site of PDGF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation was mapped to Tyr 138 in the SH3 domain; Tyr 138 is exposed on the SH3 peptide binding surface. This same site is phosphorylated in vitro by the PDGF receptor when purified baculovirus-expressed c-Src is complexed with the activated receptor. Phosphorylation of Tyr 138 required association of c-Src with the PDGF receptor via its SH2 domain. When a c-Src Phe 138 mutant was stably expressed in Src- mouse fibroblasts, it was activated to the same extent as wild type c-Src following PDGF stimulation, indicating that phosphorylation of this site is not required for PDGF-mediated activation. However, Tyr 138 phosphorylation was found to diminish SH3 domain peptide ligand binding ability in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
12.
The Cbl protooncogene product has emerged as a novel negative regulator of receptor and non-receptor tyrosine kinases through currently undefined mechanisms. Therefore, determining how Cbl physically interacts with tyrosine kinases is of substantial interest. We recently identified a phosphotyrosine binding (PTB) domain residing within the N-terminal transforming region of Cbl (Cbl-N), which mediated direct binding to ZAP-70 tyrosine kinase. Here, we have screened a degenerate phosphopeptide library and show that the Cbl-PTB domain selects a D(N/D)XpY motif, reminiscent of but distinct from the NPXpY motif recognized by the PTB domains of Shc and IRS-1/2. A phosphopeptide predicted by this motif and corresponding to the in vivo negative regulatory phosphorylation site of ZAP-70 (Tyr(P)292) specifically inhibited binding of ZAP-70 to Cbl-N. A ZAP-70/Y292F mutant failed to bind to Cbl-N, whereas a D290A mutant resulted in a 64% decrease in binding, confirming the importance of the Tyr(P) and Y-2 residues in Cbl-PTB domain recognition. Finally the ZAP-70/Y292F mutant also failed to associate with Cbl-N or full-length Cbl in vivo. These results identify a potential Cbl-PTB domain-dependent role for Cbl in the negative regulation of ZAP-70 and predict potential Cbl-PTB domain binding sites on other protein tyrosine kinases known to interact with Cbl.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The kinase insert domain-containing receptor (KDR) for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been shown to be involved in vasculogenesis and angiogenesis. This receptor is characterized by seven immunoglobulin (Ig)-like domains within its extracellular region. To identify the domains involved in VEGF binding, we constructed various deletion mutants of the extracellular region fused with the crystallizable fragment portion of an IgG and then examined the binding affinity with VEGF by means of the BIAcore biosensor assay. Deletion of the COOH-terminal two or three Ig-like domains out of a total of seven affected ligand dissociation rather than association. Further deletion of the fourth domain caused a drastic decrease in the association rate. Binding ability was abolished completely with removal of the third domain. The mutant KDR proteins lacking the NH2-terminal Ig-like domain exhibited a slightly higher association rate compared with those of the mutants having this domain. Deletion of the first two NH2-terminal Ig-like domains caused a drastic reduction in the association rate, but affinity to VEGF was retained. These results suggest that the third Ig-like domain is critical for ligand binding, the second and fourth domains are important for ligand association, and the fifth and sixth domains are required for retention of the ligand bound to the receptor molecule. The first Ig-like domain may regulate the ligand binding.  相似文献   

15.
Human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) controls the production, maturation, and function of cells in multiple hematopoietic lineages. These effects are mediated by a cell-surface receptor (GM-R) composed of alpha and beta subunits, each containing 378 and 881 amino acids, respectively. Whereas the alpha subunit exists as several isoforms that bind GM-CSF with low affinity, the beta common subunit (beta c) does not bind GM-CSF itself, but acts as a high-affinity converter for GM-CSF, interleukin-3 (IL-3), and IL-5 receptor alpha subunits. The cytoplasmic region of GM-R alpha consists of a membrane-proximal conserved region shared by the alpha 1 and alpha 2 isoforms and a C-terminal variable region that is divergent between alpha 1 and alpha 2. The cytoplasmic region of beta c contains membrane proximal serine and acidic domains. To investigate the amino acid sequences that influence signal transduction by this receptor complex, we constructed a series of cytoplasmic truncation mutants of the alpha 2 and beta subunits. To study these truncations, we stably transfected the IL-3-dependent murine cell line Ba/F3 with wild-type or mutant cDNAs. We found that the wild-type and mutant alpha subunits conferred similar low-affinity binding sites for human GM-CSF to Ba/F3, and the wild-type or mutant beta subunit converted some of these sites to high-affinity; the cytoplasmic domain of beta was unnecessary for this high-affinity conversion. Proliferation assays showed that the membrane-proximal conserved region of GM-R alpha and the serine-acidic domain of beta c are required for both cell proliferation and ligand-dependent phosphorylation of a 93-kD cytoplasmic protein. We suggest that these regions may represent an important signal transduction motif present in several cytokine receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Activation of the multicomponent interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R) complex leads to a rapid increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of a number of cellular proteins including the IL-2R beta and IL-2R gamma chains of the IL-2R and the RAF-1 serine threonine kinase. In addition, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI-3K) protein and activity can be immunoprecipitated with anti-phosphotyrosine and anti-IL-2R beta antibodies from IL-2-activated but not resting T lymphocytes. We have demonstrated that the SH2 (SRC homology 2) domains of the 85 kDa subunit of PI-3K are sufficient to mediate binding of the PI-3K complex to tyrosine phosphorylated, but not non-phosphorylated IL-2R beta, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation is an integral component of the activation of PI-3K by the IL-2R. Since none of the members of the IL-2R complex contains an intrinsic tyrosine kinase domain, IL-2-induced tyrosine phosphorylation must be the consequence of activation of intracellular tyrosine kinases. SRC family members including lck, lyn and fyn have been demonstrated to associate with IL-2R beta through binding of the kinase domain to the acidic domain of IL-2R beta. However, we have demonstrated that the serine rich (SD) region of the cytosolic domain of IL-2R beta is also required for association of a tyrosine kinase with the IL-2R complex and that IL-2 can induce proliferation and tyrosine phosphorylation in cell lines which lack the known SRC family kinases expressed by T lymphocytes. Thus members of other kinase families besides SRC may also be involved in mediating IL-2 signal transduction. Biochemical studies and studies of cells expressing mutant IL-2 receptors indicate that IL-2-induced tyrosine kinase activation initiates a complex signaling cascade. The cascade includes SRC family kinase members such as lck, fyn, and lyn, activation of Raf-1 and PI-3K, and ras, and increased expression of the fos, fra-1, and jun protooncogenes. In addition, ligation of the IL-2R leads to rapid increases in myc expression and more delayed increases in the expression of the cdc2 and cdk2 kinases and the cyclins through a tyrosine phosphorylation independent pathway. Whether other biochemical processes initiated by IL-2R ligation, including activation of the MAP2, p70S6 and p90RSK serine threonine kinases, activation of NF-kappa B, and increased expression of Raf-1, Pim-1, bcl-2, IL-2R alpha and IL-2R beta, are consequences of the IL-2-induced tyrosine kinase cascade remains to be determined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Interferon (IFN)-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta induction of the transporter associated with antigen processing-1 (TAP1) promoter was compared in HeLa cells and endothelial cells (ECs). In HeLa cells, IFN-gamma acts through Stat1alpha/Stat1alpha homodimers binding to the gamma activating sequence (GAS) and IFN-alpha/beta acts through Stat1/Stat2/p48 binding to the IFN-stimulated response element (ISRE). In ECs, however, IFN-gamma and IFN-alpha/beta act through both the GAS and ISRE. The basis of the IFN signaling crossover in ECs was investigated. HeLa and ECs contain similar ratios of Stat1alpha to Stat2 proteins, and IFN-alpha/beta also activates the same Janus kinases (JAKs) (Jak1 and tyrosine kinase (Tyk) 2 but not Jak2). However, IFN-alpha/beta activates more Stat1alpha than does IFN-gamma in ECs, whereas the reverse occurs in HeLa, and expression of the IFN-alpha/beta receptor-associated phosphatase SHP-1 is much lower in ECs than HeLa cells. Overexpression of SHP-1 in ECs blocks IFN-alpha/beta signaling through GAS, and expression of a dominan negative SHP-1 in HeLa cells permits IFN-alpha/ss signaling through GAS, demonstrating a role for SHP-1 in regulating crossovers between the IFN-alpha/beta and IFN-gamma signaling pathways.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the phosphorylation of the alpha and beta subunits of the Type I interferon (IFN) receptor induced by Type I IFNs in the human U-266 and MOLT-4 cell lines. Both IFN-alpha and IFN-beta induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta subunit of the receptor. The Type I IFN-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the beta subunit was rapid and transient, being detectable within 1 min of Type I IFN treatment and gradually diminishing to almost base-line levels by 60 min. All Type I IFNs studied were found to induce tyrosine phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of the Type I IFN receptor, the p135tyk2 and JAK-1 tyrosine kinases, and the ISGF3 alpha components. Interestingly, IFN-beta, but not IFN-alpha or IFN-omega, induced tyrosine phosphorylation of an alpha subunit-associated protein with an apparent molecular mass of approximately 100 kDa (p100). These data suggest the existence of a common signaling pathway(s) for Type I IFNs involving the alpha and beta subunits of the receptor, the tyrosine kinases p135tyk2 and JAK-1, and the ISGF3 alpha components. However, differences between the signaling pathways of different Type I IFNs exist, as suggested by tyrosine phosphorylation of an alpha subunit-associated protein only in response to IFN-beta.  相似文献   

19.
Receptor tyrosine kinases Flt-1 and Flk-1/KDR, and their ligand, the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), were shown to be essential for angiogenesis in the mouse embryo by gene targeting. Flk-1/KDR null mutant mice exhibited impaired endothelial and hematopoietic cell development. On the other hand, Flt-1 null mutation resulted in early embryonic death at embryonic day 8.5, showing disorganization of blood vessels, such as overgrowth of endothelial cells. Flt-1 differs from Flk-1 in that it displays a higher affinity for VEGF but lower kinase activity, suggesting the importance of its extracellular domain. To examine the biological role of Flt-1 in embryonic development and vascular formation, we deleted the kinase domain without affecting the ligand binding region. Flt-1 tyrosine kinase-deficient homozygous mice (flt-1(TK-/-)) developed normal vessels and survived. However, VEGF-induced macrophage migration was strongly suppressed in flt-1(TK-/-) mice. These results indicate that Flt-1 without tyrosine kinase domain is sufficient to allow embryonic development with normal angiogenesis, and that a receptor tyrosine kinase plays a main biological role as a ligand-binding molecule.  相似文献   

20.
A superfamily of growth factor and cytokine receptors has recently been identified, which is characterized by four spatially conserved cysteine residues, a tryptophan-serine motif (WSXWS) in the extracellular domain, and a proline-rich cytoplasmic domain. The high affinity human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor (hGM-CSFR) consists of two subunits, alpha (hGM-CSFR alpha) and beta (hGM-CSFR beta), both of which are members of the receptor superfamily. In this study, we prepared mutations in conserved amino acids of the receptor subunit necessary for GM-CSF binding (hGM-CSFR alpha) and analyzed mutant receptors for low affinity binding, internalization, and high affinity binding when complexed with the beta subunit. Mutations in the cytoplasmic domain did not affect GM-CSF binding or receptor internalization. Mutation of a single conserved serine residue within the WSXWS motif diminishes cell surface receptor expression but not ligand binding. Mutation of either the second or third conserved cysteine residue of hGM-CSFR alpha resulted in complete loss of low affinity binding; however, co-expression of the cysteine 2 mutant with hGM-CSFR beta yielded a high affinity receptor complex. Since neither the cysteine 2 mutant nor the beta subunit can bind ligand alone, this result suggests that hGM-CSFR alpha and hGM-CSFR beta exist in a preformed heterodimeric protein complex on the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

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