Publication | Open Access
Structure-function relationships for the interleukin 2 receptor: location of ligand and antibody binding sites on the Tac receptor chain by mutational analysis.
56
Citations
12
References
1988
Year
ImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunodominanceImmunologic MechanismImmune SystemTac GeneCell SignalingTac Receptor ChainReceptor (Biochemistry)Exon 4Cell BiologyCytokineMolecular ImmunologyTac ProteinSignal TransductionInterleukin 2Structure-function RelationshipsSystems BiologyMedicine
The Tac protein plays a role in high- and low-affinity interleukin 2 (IL-2) receptors. A mutational survey of this molecule identified several small segments in which the binding of IL-2 was particularly sensitive to amino acid substitutions. Two of the segments (residues 1-6 and 35-43) located in the exon 2-encoded region of the molecule overlapped the apparent binding sites of three monoclonal antibodies (anti-Tac, GL439, and H31) that block high- and low-affinity Tac-IL-2 interactions, thus supporting the hypothesis that these segments of the protein are at or near sites of receptor-ligand contact. In contrast, the apparent binding sites of antibodies (Hiei and H47) that selectively inhibit high-affinity IL-2 binding were mapped to a distinct location (residues 158-160) within the region encoded by exon 4 of the Tac gene. Since high-affinity receptors consist of a heterodimer of Tac and a second ligand-binding protein (p70), this portion of the Tac molecule may be involved in the interaction between the two receptor subunits. As expected, the binding sites of noninhibitory antibodies (7G7/B6, residues 140-144; H48, residues 170-211) did not overlap those segments in which IL-2-binding mutants were observed. These results provide a preliminary correlation of structure and function for the Tac protein that should prove useful in evaluating detailed models of the IL-2-receptor complex.
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