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Publication : SLP-65: a new signaling component in B lymphocytes which requires expression of the antigen receptor for phosphorylation.

First Author  Wienands J Year  1998
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  188
Issue  4 Pages  791-5
PubMed ID  9705962 Mgi Jnum  J:53975
Mgi Id  MGI:1333701 Doi  10.1084/jem.188.4.791
Citation  Wienands J, et al. (1998) SLP-65: a new signaling component in B lymphocytes which requires expression of the antigen receptor for phosphorylation. J Exp Med 188(4):791-5
abstractText  The B cell antigen receptor (BCR) consists of the membrane-bound immunoglobulin (Ig) molecule as antigen-binding subunit and the Ig- alpha/Ig-beta heterodimer as signaling subunit. BCR signal transduction involves activation of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and phosphorylation of several proteins, only some of which have been identified. The phosphorylation of these proteins can be induced by exposure of B cells either to antigen or to the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor pervanadate/H2O2. One of the earliest substrates in B cells is a 65-kD protein, which we identify here as a B cell adaptor protein. This protein, named SLP-65, is part of a signaling complex involving Grb-2 and Vav and shows homology to SLP-76, a signaling element of the T cell receptor. In pervanadate/H2O2-stimulated cells, SLP-65 becomes phosphorylated only upon expression of the BCR. These data suggest that SLP-65 is part of a BCR transducer complex.
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