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The T cell receptor associated CD3‐ϵ protein is phosphorylated upon T cell activation in the two tyrosine residues of a conserved signal transduction motif
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Citations
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References
1993
Year
Signal transduction through the T cell receptor for antigen, the TcR/CD3 complex, involves phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in the CD3-zeta chain. Since both CD3-epsilon and the zeta chain contain a tyrosine-based signaling motif, we examine phosphorylation of CD3-epsilon in human T cells. Engagement of the TcR/CD3 complex induced tyrosine phosphorylation of CD3-epsilon in vivo. Induction of CD3-epsilon phosphorylation followed similar kinetics to that of the zeta chain phosphorylation. In contrast to zeta, CD3-epsilon phosphorylation was strictly dependent upon cell surface expression of this member of the TcR/CD3 complex. Chemical and proteolytic cleavage combined with peptide-specific Western blotting established that CD3-epsilon phosphorylation occurred in the two tyrosine residues located in the signal transduction motif in the C-terminal portion of the molecule. Taken together, these data indicated that phosphorylation of CD3-epsilon by tyrosine protein kinases may serve to couple the TcR/CD3 complex to other effector molecules in the signaling cascade.
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