First Author | Muta T | Year | 1994 |
Journal | Nature | Volume | 368 |
Issue | 6466 | Pages | 70-3 |
PubMed ID | 8107887 | Mgi Jnum | J:16993 |
Mgi Id | MGI:65049 | Doi | 10.1038/368070a0 |
Citation | Muta T, et al. (1994) A 13-amino-acid motif in the cytoplasmic domain of Fc gamma RIIB modulates B-cell receptor signalling [published erratum appears in Nature 1994 May 26;369(6478):340]. Nature 368(6466):70-3 |
abstractText | The Fc receptor on B lymphocytes, Fc gamma RIIB (beta 1 isoform), helps to modulate B-cell activation triggered by the surface immunoglobulin complex. Crosslinking of membrane immunoglobulin by antigen or anti-Ig F(ab')2 antibody induces a transient increase in cytosolic free Ca2+, a rise in inositol-3-phosphate, activation of protein kinase C, and enhanced protein tyrosine phosphorylation. Crosslinking Fc gamma RIIB with the surface immunoglobulin complex confers a dominant signal that prevents or aborts lymphocyte activation triggered through the ARH-1 motifs of the signal transduction subunits Ig-alpha and Ig-beta. Here we show that Fc gamma RIIB modulates membrane immunoglobulin-induced Ca2+ mobilization by inhibiting Ca2+ influx, without changing the pattern of tyrosine phosphorylation. A 13-amino-acid motif in the cytoplasmic domain of Fc gamma RIIB is both necessary and sufficient for this effect. Tyrosine at residue 309 in this motif is phosphorylated upon co-crosslinking with surface immunoglobulin; mutation of this residue aborts the inhibitory effect of Fc gamma RIIB. This inhibition is directly coupled to signalling mediated through Ig-alpha and Ig-beta as evidenced by chimaeric IgM/alpha and IgM/beta molecules. The 13-residue motif in Fc gamma RIIB controls lymphocyte activation by inhibiting a Ca2+ signalling pathway triggered through ARH-1 motifs as a result of recruitment of novel SH2-containing proteins that interact with this Fc gamma RIIB cytoplasmic motif. |