Abstract

T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling is initiated by recruiting ZAP-70 to the cytosolic part of TCR. ZAP-70, a non-receptor tyrosine kinase, is composed of an N-terminal tandem SH2 (tSH2) domain connected to the C-terminal kinase domain. The ZAP-70 is recruited to the membrane through binding of tSH2 domain and the doubly phosphorylated ITAM motifs of CD3 chains in the TCR complex. Our results show that the tSH2 domain undergoes a biphasic structural transition while binding to the doubly phosphorylated ITAM-ζ1 peptide. The C-terminal SH2 domain binds first to the phosphotyrosine residue of ITAM peptide to form an encounter complex leading to subsequent binding of second phosphotyrosine residue to the N-SH2 domain. We decipher a network of noncovalent interactions that allosterically couple the two SH2 domains during binding to doubly phosphorylated ITAMs. Mutation in the allosteric network residues, for example, W165C, uncouples the formation of encounter complex to the subsequent ITAM binding thus explaining the altered recruitment of ZAP-70 to the plasma membrane causing autoimmune arthritis in mice. The proposed mechanism of allosteric coupling is unique to ZAP-70, which is fundamentally different from Syk, a close homolog of ZAP-70 expressed in B-cells.

Highlights

  • The zeta-chain-associated protein tyrosine kinase, ZAP-70, is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase crucial for T-cell signaling, development, activation, and proliferation[1,2,3,4]

  • nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and biochemical analysis of different tandem SH2 (tSH2) domain mutants, we show that the C-SH2 domain binds first to the phosphotyrosine residue of the immuno-receptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAM)

  • We used intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence to monitor the structural transition of an isolated tSH2 domain of ZAP-70 upon binding to doubly-phosphorylated ITAM-z1 peptide

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Summary

Introduction

The zeta-chain-associated protein tyrosine kinase, ZAP-70, is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase crucial for T-cell signaling, development, activation, and proliferation[1,2,3,4]. Our data showed a biphasic transition of the ZAP-70 tSH2 domain structure from an open to a closed state upon binding to doubly-phosphorylated ITAM-z1 peptide. The tSH2 domain of Syk binds uncooperatively (nH=1.09 ±0.01, K"$% = 65 ± 12 nM) to the doubly-phosphorylated ITAM-z1 peptide, which undergoes a hyperbolic structural transition from apo to holo state[38] (Figure S2e).

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