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=='''Signal Transduction'''==
=='''Signal Transduction'''==
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The diagram in Figure 4 depicts the initial process of B cell activation by the antigen binding to the antibody at the Fab region. The underlying mechanism for signal transduction is unknown but it is speculated to operate under what is known as the conserved assembly mechanism (cite). This means that upon antigen binding, BCRs on the surface of the cell begin to cluster to cause the phosphorylation of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs located in Igα and Igβ. In its “off” state, the constant region four of heavy chain B overlaps the extracellular components of Igα and Igβ. As the antigen binds, it induces a conformational change to release the overlap and allow for clustering about the BCR. Now, in its “on” state the phosphorylation of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunoreceptor_tyrosine-based_activation_motif ITAM region] (observed here as the conserved tyrosine residues are phosphorylated) within the intracellular tails of Igα and Igβ drives downstream kinase activity to continue to process of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrosine-protein_kinase_SYK signal cascading]
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The diagram in Figure 4 depicts the initial process of B cell activation by the antigen binding to the antibody at the Fab region. The underlying mechanism for signal transduction is unknown but it is speculated to operate under what is known as the conserved assembly mechanism (cite). This means that upon antigen binding, BCRs on the surface of the cell begin to cluster to cause the phosphorylation of the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs located in Igα and Igβ. In its “off” state, the constant region four of heavy chain B overlaps the extracellular components of Igα and Igβ. As the antigen binds, it induces a conformational change to release the overlap and allow for clustering about the BCR. Now, in its “on” state the phosphorylation of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immunoreceptor_tyrosine-based_activation_motif ITAM region] (observed in figure 4 as conserved phosphorylated tyrosine residues) within the intracellular tails of Igα and Igβ drives downstream kinase activity to continue to process of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrosine-protein_kinase_SYK signal cascading].
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[[Image:Signal_diagram_2.png|400 px|left|thumb|'''Figure 4. IgM Antibody Signal Transduction following Antigen Binding.''']]
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[[Image:Signal_diagram_2.png|400 px|left|thumb|'''Figure 4. IgM Antibody Signal Transduction following Antigen Binding.''' At the end of the intracellular Igα and Igβ helices are their cytoplasmic tails, and on each tail are tyrosine residues that are phosphorylated by one of two tyrosine kinase enzymes: Splenic-tyrosine kinase and Src family kinase. While the specific tyrosine residues are unknown in the mechanism, it is understood that their phosphorylation activates the B cell by triggering downstream intracellular signaling.]]
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Revision as of 16:47, 7 April 2023

Human B-cell Antigen Receptor: IgM BCR

IgM B-Cell Receptor (PDB: 7xq8)

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References


Student Contributors

Detonyeá Dickson, Allison Goss, Jackson Payton

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