Presentation of viral antigens to T cells does not require uptake by 'professional' antigen-presenting cells. Viruses have specialized to enter the cells in which they replicate. Virus entry, uncoating and new viral protein synthesis can load both the cytosolic and the endosomal pathway of antigen p
CD4, CD8 and the role of CD45 in T-cell activation
β Scribed by Jeffrey A. Ledbetter; Julie P. Deans; Alejandro Aruffo; Laura S. Grosmaire; Steven B. Kanner; Joseph B. Bolen; Gary L. Schieven
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1009 KB
- Volume
- 5
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0952-7915
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
CD4, CD8 and CD45 regulate the coupling of the T-cell receptor complex (CD3-TCR) to tyrosine kinase activation and phosphorylation of key substrates such as phospholipase C gamma 1. CD4 and CD8 contribute to activation signals through their cytoplasmic association with p56lck. Expression of the zeta-chain is required for functional synergy of the T-cell receptor with CD4 in the activation of phospholipase C gamma 1, which probably reflects an interaction between p56lck and zeta-associated kinase ZAP-70. CD45 expression is required for CD3-TCR signaling. CD45 may positively regulate signaling by dephosphorylating the carboxyl-terminal tyrosine of p56lck and p59fyn, and negatively regulate signaling by dephosphorylation of other TCR-associated substrates directly. One ligand for CD45 receptor has been identified as the B cell CD22 molecule. The positive and negative effects of CD45 are sensitive to the composition of CD45 in receptor complexes, and may be regulated by specific associations of CD45 isoforms with other receptors such as CD3-TCR, CD2 and CD4.
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