Abstract

Uncovering the plasma membrane distribution of tyrosine kinase Lck is crucial to understanding T lymphocyte triggering. Several studies of Lck species partitioning have given contradictory results. We decided to re-address this point by using phospho-specific antibodies to characterize active and inactive Lck partitioning in raft and non-raft membranes from primary human peripheral blood T lymphocytes. We show that most inactive Lck was localized in rafts and was associated with nearly all CD4 coreceptors and its negative regulator Csk in resting cells, while T cell receptor (TCR) engagement promoted a sustained dephosphorylation of inactive Lck. In contrast, active Lck had a more discrete distribution interacting with only a small number of CD4 coreceptors, and the kinase showed a rapid and short phosphorylation after TCR triggering. The differences in distribution and kinetics may be related to T lymphocyte signalling threshold modulation by Lck species and suggest how TCR triggering is first initiated. This study furthers our knowledge of the TCR activation model in primary human T lymphocytes.

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