3omz
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of MICA-specific human gamma delta T cell receptor
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedgammadelta T cells play important roles in bridging innate and adaptive immunity, but their recognition mechanisms remain poorly understood. Human gammadelta T cells of the V(delta)1 subset predominate in intestinal epithelia and respond to MICA and MICB (MHC class I chain-related, A and B; MIC) self-antigens, mediating responses to tumorigenesis or viral infection. The crystal structure of an MIC-reactive V(delta)1 gammadelta T-cell receptor (TCR) showed expected overall structural homology to antibodies, alphabeta, and other gammadelta TCRs, but complementary determining region conformations and conservation of V(delta)1 use revealed an uncharacteristically flat potential binding surface. MIC, likewise, serves as a ligand for the activating immunoreceptor natural killer group 2, D (NKG2D), also expressed on gammadelta T cells. Although MIC recognition drives both the TCR-dependent stimulatory and NKG2D-dependent costimulatory signals necessary for activation, interaction analyses showed that MIC binding by the two receptors was mutually exclusive. Analysis of relative binding kinetics suggested sequential recognition, defining constraints for the temporal organization of gammadelta T-cell/target cell interfaces. Crystal structure of a {gamma}{delta} T-cell receptor specific for the human MHC class I homolog MICA.,Xu B, Pizarro JC, Holmes MA, McBeth C, Groh V, Spies T, Strong RK Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Feb 8;108(6):2414-9. Epub 2011 Jan 24. PMID:21262824[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. See AlsoReferences
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